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外文期刊>Canadian Journal of Botany
>First-year survival ofTsuga heterophyllawithout mycorrhizae and subsequent ectomycorrhizal development on decaying logs and mineral soil
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First-year survival ofTsuga heterophyllawithout mycorrhizae and subsequent ectomycorrhizal development on decaying logs and mineral soil
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机译:First-year survival ofTsuga heterophyllawithout mycorrhizae and subsequent ectomycorrhizal development on decaying logs and mineral soil
Roots of western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) seedlings 1ndash;5+ years old that had established naturally on logs in three states of decay or on mineral soil were compared for numbers and kinds of ectomycorrhizae. Mycobionts colonizing root systems includedCenococcum geophilumFr.,Piloderma croceum(Bres.) Erikss. amp; Hjorts., and four unidentified fungi distinguished by color and morphology. About half the seedlings surviving the first growing season (2ndash;7 months) were nonmycorrhizal. Nonmycorrhizal seedlings were most frequent on the least decayed logs. However, mycotrophy appeared to be advantageous to hemlock; 1st-year mycorrhizal seedlings had shoots 60 longer and roots 47 longer than 1st-year nonmycorrhizal seedlings. All 2nd-year and older seedlings were mycorrhizal. The ability of western hemlock to survive the first growing season without mycorrhizae may contribute to its success in colonizing decaying logs, which may contain microsites devoid of effective ectomycorrhizal inocula.
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