Role of
mycorrhizal arbuscular fungi in the uptake of phosphorus by micropropagated
blackberry (Rubus fruticosus var. brazos) plants.
Yazmín
Carreón Abud1 and Eva L. Soriano Bello2
1Laboratorio
de Microbiología. Facultad de Biología.
2Instituto
de Investigaciones Químico Biológicas. Universidad Michoacana de
San Nicolás de Hidalgo. Morelia, Michoacán. MÉXICO.
E mail: ycabud@zeus.umich.mx
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The beneficial effects of arbuscular mycorrhizae on plant growth have often related to the increase in the uptake of no mobile nutrients from the soil such as phosphorus. In this work, the data obtained about the increase of phosphorus by plants extracted from in vitro cultures with mycorrhizae in relation with non-mycorrhizal plants is shown.
The
mycorrhizal fungi were isolated and propagated from maize cultures. Micro propagation systems for
blackberry were used in the Murashige and Skoog medium, varying the hormone
concentration according to the growth.
Once the plants were developed, they were put with sterile soil and were
inoculated with the previously propagated mycorrhizal fungi and finally
translated to a greenhouse. Harvest was made periodically with the objective of
making the evaluation of the different agronomic variables and the amount of
phosphorus in the aerial parts of the plant was determined by the colorimetric
method of blue molibdate.
The
percent of phosphorus in the aerial part of Rubus fruticosus var brazos,
started to increase since the 30 days of treatment, until it increased an 80%
percent at the end of the assay.
This brought more efficiency in the mycorrhized plants to raise the
photosynthetic rates in a shorter period of time and to be under a lower stress
due to the transplant.
One of the major effects of mycorrhizal fungi inoculation in plants is the increase of phosphorus absorption ability, by the direct activity of the extramatricial mycelium that allows the exploration of the soil volume. This way, the mycorrhizal arbuscular fungi make up another chance in the process of getting nutrients for the plants, particularly phosphorus.