Detection of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi associated with pecan ( Caryaillinoinensis ) trees by molecular and morphological approaches

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal community associated with pecan ( ) roots and rhizospheric soils was assessed by spore isolation and morphological characterisation and by pyrosequencing of AM molecular markers. The AM fungal community associated with pecan growing in the field, was always more di...

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Veröffentlicht in:MycoKeys (Sofia, Bulgaria) Bulgaria), 2018-11, Vol.42 (42), p.73-88
Hauptverfasser: Idondo, L Fernández, Colombo, R P, Recchi, M, Silvani, V A, Pérgola, M, Martínez, A, Godeas, A M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungal community associated with pecan ( ) roots and rhizospheric soils was assessed by spore isolation and morphological characterisation and by pyrosequencing of AM molecular markers. The AM fungal community associated with pecan growing in the field, was always more diverse than that associated with pecan growing in containers. This was not observed when AM richness was studied, suggesting that soil disturbance by a reduction in host plant richness leads to a less equitable distribution of AM fungal species, in contrast to natural soils. The chosen primers (AMV4.5F/AMDGR) for pyrosequencing showed high AM fungal specificity. Based on 97% sequence similarity, 49 operational taxonomic units (MOTUs) were obtained and, amongst these, 41 MOTUs corresponded to the . The number of obtained AM sequences ranged from 2164, associated with field samples, to 5572 obtained from pecan trap pot culture samples, defining 30 and 29 MOTUs, respectively. Richness estimated by conventional species identification was 6 and 9 AM fungal species in soil and pot samples, respectively. , and were the only taxa detected using both techniques. Predominant sequences in the pecan rhizosphere samples, such as and other less abundant ( , , , ), were detected only by pyrosequencing. Detection of AM fungal species based on spore morphology, in combination with molecular approaches, provides a more comprehensive estimate of fungal community composition.
ISSN:1314-4057
1314-4049
DOI:10.3897/mycokeys.42.26118