INMIBO ( EX - PROPLAME)   14614
INSTITUTO DE MICOLOGIA Y BOTANICA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Epichloë endophytes of a wild grass promote mycorrhizal colonization of neighbor grasses
Autor/es:
VIGNALE, M. VICTORIA; NOVAS, M. VICTORIA; IANNONE, LEOPOLDO J.
Revista:
FUNGAL ECOLOGY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2020 vol. 45
ISSN:
1754-5048
Resumen:
A field experiment was performed to study the effect of Epichloë endophytes of the wild forage grass Bromus auleticus on mycorrhizal colonization, seedling emergence and growth parameters in three heterospecific grasses of agronomic interest. Plots with B. auleticus associated with Epichloë (E+) and non-associated (E-) plants were established and 3 y later, seeds of Lolium multiflorum (E+ or E-), Schedonorus arundinaceus (E+ or E-) and Bromus catharticus (not establishing associations with Epichloë) were sown as B. auleticus neighbors. B. auleticus E+ plants induced a significant increase in mycorrhizal colonization of the neighbor grasses, even higher in the E- neighbor plants (L. multiflorum and S. arundinaceus), in comparison to B. auleticus E- neighbors. Seedling emergence, root length, leaves number or shoot dry weight were not affected. This is the first approach to studying these triple interactions (endophyte-grass-mycorrhiza) involving wild and forage grasses in the field. Our results show that the effect of Epichloë extends further than its own host and suggest an interaction among endophytes of heterospecific neighbors at the rhizosphere level.Keywords arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, Bromus auleticus, Lolium multiflorum, multiple mutualistic symbiosis, root exudates, Schedonorus arundinaceus