INVESTIGADORES
LUGO Monica Alejandra
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
A first snapshot on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in soils of different crops farming in the Puna
Autor/es:
LUGO M. A.; ONTIVERO R. E.; RISIO, L. V.; BIANCIOTTO, V.; LUMINI, E.
Lugar:
Bariloche
Reunión:
Workshop; II International Symposium Mycorrhizal Symbiosis in South America; 2019
Institución organizadora:
Universidad Nacional del Comahue, Universidad Austral de Chile
Resumen:
Soil ecosystems and its functioning are under the threat of biodiversity lost by the increase of cultivated areas and agronomic exploitation intensity. Changes in land use alter the structure and functioning of ecosystems where biodiversity plays a vital role in the ecosystem-services (ES) provision. Arbuscular-Mycorrhizal-Fungi (AMF) are a key soil biota functional group with an important potential to contribute to crop productivity and implement of new strategies for sustainable production. The different land uses and soil types affect the AMF diversity and their function in the community. Despite the significant relationship between AMF diversity, land uses and its ES, there are very few studies focused in ES of AMF in Latin America. The Puna is an arid-high plateau where plants experience high abiotic-stresses and unique extreme distinctive environmental conditions. This work is part of CNR-CONICET Project ?Ecological characterization of AMF communities as ecosystem indicators for arid and semiarid Argentinean soils? that analyze the effects of different land uses on AMF diversity and their resilience; identify AMF species useful as indicators of ecosystem health and determinate potential ES derived from AMF diversity through a combination of molecular and morphological approaches. In this Project we sampled 6 land uses conditions including hotspots areas in Argentine Puna with different stressors. The aim of this work was to analyze in Chaupi Rodeo (Jujuy, Argentina), AMF diversity (spores total number, spore-taxa richness) in 3 crops species usually farming by people settlement: native corn, bean and native potato, under a familiar land use, without the supplements of agrochemicals but with different histories of crops rotation. Each crop species has 3 plots replicates; in each plot, 5 subsamples were taken. The total number of AMF spores/100g of dry-soil were isolated and counted for each sample under dissecting-microscope. Preliminary results indicate that AMF spores were most abundant in corn plots, followed by potato and bean. The number of AMF taxa morphologies was high and variable (20 to 4); were represented glomoid, acaulosporoid, scutellosporoid, gigasporoid, and diversisporoid morphologies, and spores were single, aggregate or forming sporocarps with peridium. The AMF diversity changes could be due to the rotation histories, with less effect of the species of crops. Molecular data on the same plots are under investigation.