Abstract
Coinoculations with mycelium of Laccaria bicolor and spores of Rhizopogon spp. included in alginate gel have been carried out to determine: (1) the ability of the mixed inoculum to produce dual-colonized containerized Douglas-fir and maritime pine planting stocks and (2) the colonization pattern of the two fungi in individual root systems. For both tree species, the maximal proportion of dual-colonized seedlings obtained almost never exceeded 50%. The rest of the seedlings remained colonized by a single fungus or were non-colonized. In Douglas-fir inoculations, the relationship between the dual-colonized seedlings obtained and the initial dose of the two fungi was highly significant. The highest proportion of dual-colonized seedlings was obtained when the highest dose of R. subareolatus was used (106 spores/seedling), regardless of the dose of L. bicolor. Among the treatments producing 25% or more dual-colonized seedlings, differences in the proportion of Laccaria/Rhizopogon mycorrhizas and total root colonization percentages were not clearly related to the initial combination of doses. The proportion of dual-colonized maritime pine seedlings was not significantly related to the initial inoculation doses of the two fungi. The proportion of Laccaria/Rhizopogon mycorrhizas was not significantly different among treatments with 25% or more dual-colonized seedlings, whereas total colonization percentages ranged from 37% with the combination 0.08/104 (g L. bicolor / spores R. roseolus per seedling) to 74% with the combination 0.08/106, this difference being statistically significant.
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Accepted: 15 September 1998
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Parladé, J., Alvarez, I. & Pera, J. Coinoculation of containerized Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and maritime pine (Pinus pinaster) seedlings with the ectomycorrhizal fungi Laccaria bicolor and Rhizopogon spp.. Mycorrhiza 8, 189–195 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s005720050233
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s005720050233