TY - JOUR
T1 - Inoculum effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on soybeans grown in long-term bare-fallowed field with low phosphate availability
AU - Hayashi, Masaki
AU - Niwa, Rieko
AU - Urashima, Yasufumi
AU - Suga, Yuko
AU - Sato, Shusei
AU - Hirakawa, Hideki
AU - Yoshida, Shigenobu
AU - Ezawa, Tatsuhiro
AU - Karasawa, Toshihiko
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by ACCEL from the Japan Science and Technology Agency [grant number: JPMJAC1403]. We thank the Kyushu Okinawa Agricultural Research Center, NARO, Japan, the Hiroshima Prefectural Technology Research Institute’s Agricultural Technology Research Center, Japan, and the Nagano Vegetable and Ornamental Crops Experiment Station, Japan, for providing soybean seeds; Dr. Takumi Sato and Prof. Keitaro Tawaraya (Yamagata University) for providing Welsh onion seedlings; Ms. Miho Ishitsuka, Ms. Noriko Iioka, and Ms. Noriko Tayama (Central Region Agricultural Research Center, NARO, Japan) for their technical assistance; and Mr. Katsumi Sakamoto, Mr. Kiyoshi Yokotsuka, and Mr. Ichiro Ameta (Headquarter, NARO, Japan) for their management of the field.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, © 2018 Japanese Society of Soil Science and Plant Nutrition.
PY - 2018/5/4
Y1 - 2018/5/4
N2 - Inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) can increase the growth of host plants, especially under condition of low phosphate (P) availability. Although this effect is shown relatively easily in simplified systems such as pot experiments, it is often hard to show in the field because of complicating factors such as competition with indigenous AMF. We conducted an AMF inoculation experiment with three Japanese soybean cultivars (Enrei, Misuzudaizu, and Akishirome) in an allophanic (Umbric Silandic) Andosol field under the long-term selective application of major nutrients (NPK and -P) and bare fallow. In the inoculation plots, introduced AMF were well colonized in soybean roots at flowering stage. In the -P plots, inoculation tended to increase the shoot dry weight of all the three soybean cultivars; this effect remained until harvest. Although a significant difference is not recognized, there was a tendency of residual effect on Enrei in the following year. In the NPK plots, inoculation did not significantly increase the shoot dry weight. We thought that in the -P plots, the long-term selective application of N and K and the long-term maintenance of bare fallow created the soil conditions of low P availability and poor native AMF. Thus, introduced AMF can benefit soybean growth and yield in the soil with low competitor AMF density and low phosphate availability.
AB - Inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) can increase the growth of host plants, especially under condition of low phosphate (P) availability. Although this effect is shown relatively easily in simplified systems such as pot experiments, it is often hard to show in the field because of complicating factors such as competition with indigenous AMF. We conducted an AMF inoculation experiment with three Japanese soybean cultivars (Enrei, Misuzudaizu, and Akishirome) in an allophanic (Umbric Silandic) Andosol field under the long-term selective application of major nutrients (NPK and -P) and bare fallow. In the inoculation plots, introduced AMF were well colonized in soybean roots at flowering stage. In the -P plots, inoculation tended to increase the shoot dry weight of all the three soybean cultivars; this effect remained until harvest. Although a significant difference is not recognized, there was a tendency of residual effect on Enrei in the following year. In the NPK plots, inoculation did not significantly increase the shoot dry weight. We thought that in the -P plots, the long-term selective application of N and K and the long-term maintenance of bare fallow created the soil conditions of low P availability and poor native AMF. Thus, introduced AMF can benefit soybean growth and yield in the soil with low competitor AMF density and low phosphate availability.
KW - Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
KW - bare fallow
KW - inoculum effect
KW - low available P
KW - soybean
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U2 - 10.1080/00380768.2018.1473007
DO - 10.1080/00380768.2018.1473007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85046996366
SN - 0038-0768
VL - 64
SP - 306
EP - 311
JO - Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
JF - Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
IS - 3
ER -