Authors
MH Ryan, Mark Tibbett, Tammy EDMONDS‐TIBBETT, LDB Suriyagoda, Hans Lambers, GR Cawthray, Jiayin Pang
Publication date
2012/12
Journal
Plant, Cell & Environment
Volume
35
Issue
12
Pages
2170-2180
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Two key plant adaptations for phosphorus (P) acquisition are carboxylate exudation into the rhizosphere and mycorrhizal symbioses. These target different soil P resources, presumably with different plant carbon costs. We examined the effect of inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) on amount of rhizosphere carboxylates and plant P uptake for 10 species of low‐P adapted Kennedia grown for 23 weeks in low‐P sand. Inoculation decreased carboxylates in some species (up to 50%), decreased plant dry weight (21%) and increased plant P content (23%). There was a positive logarithmic relationship between plant P content and the amount of rhizosphere citric acid for inoculated and uninoculated plants. Causality was indicated by experiments using sand where little citric acid was lost from the soil solution over 2 h and citric acid at low concentrations desorbed P into the soil solution. Senesced leaf P …
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