OFR-39-83 Nursery Techniques For Production Of Tree Seedlings Infected With Specific Mycorrhizal Fungi For Surface Mine Reclamation

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
James W. Hendrix
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
46
File Size:
13592 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

A survey of endomycorrhizal fungi occurring on orphan coalmine lands in Western and Eastern Kentucky revealed a great diversity of species present. Thus a large number of fungi are available for isolation and evalution for enhancing revegetation of mined land. Endomycorrhizal fungi isolated from orphan mines stimulated growth of sweetgum seedlings on mine soil at low fertilisation but inhibited growth at high fertilization; this growth inhibition at high fertilization did not occur with plants growing on peat-perlite. Banding of endomycorrbizal inoculum was not advantageous, compared with incorporation of inoculum throughout the growth medium, for production of mycorrhizal sweetgum seedlings. Newly reclaimed mine spoils were nearly nonmycorrhizal, compared with land reclaimed four or eight years earlier. A procedure for isolation of single-spore cultures of endomycorrhizal fungi was developed; this procedure is necessary for studies of ecotypic variability. A practical procedure using container-grown Pisolithus tinctorius-infected shortleaf pine seedlings for production of large numbers of bareroot pine seedlings infected with P. tinctorius for mined land reclamation was demonstrated.
Citation

APA: James W. Hendrix  (1982)  OFR-39-83 Nursery Techniques For Production Of Tree Seedlings Infected With Specific Mycorrhizal Fungi For Surface Mine Reclamation

MLA: James W. Hendrix OFR-39-83 Nursery Techniques For Production Of Tree Seedlings Infected With Specific Mycorrhizal Fungi For Surface Mine Reclamation. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1982.

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