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Articles

Variation in Mycorrhizal and Spore Morphology of Glomus Occultum and Glomus Diaphanum as Influenced by Plant Host and Soil Environment

Pages 192-204 | Accepted 22 Aug 1984, Published online: 12 Sep 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Spore and mycorrhizal morphology were examined among isolates of Glomus occultum and Glomus diaphanum collected from soils with dissimilar physical and chemical properties and maintained in pot culture on five plant species. Spore size, color, and structure were not influenced significantly by host or soil environmental interactions. Spore wall structure consistently separated G. occultum and G. diaphanum. Intraspecific variation in overlapping taxonomic characteristics such as spore size did not obscure significant differences between species. These results provide further evidence that spore morphological characteristics are valid criteria for identifying and classifying VA mycorrhizal fungi. However, mycorrhizal morphology also differentiated the two endophyte species. Intraradical structures formed by G. occultum stained weakly within two weeks after initial penetration of roots and disappeared thereafter. Glomus diaphanum produced arbuscules, vesicles, and spores in stained roots. Mycorrhizal morphology and ontogeny of each endophyte were similar in all hosts. Significant variation was expressed in the rate and degree of mycorrhizal development. Disparate, yet consistent, mycorrhizae formed by G. occultum and G. diaphanum indicate that mycorrhizal anatomy also may be important in the classification of VA mycorrhizal fungi.

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