SPECIES-RICH BUT DISTINCT ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL COMMUNITIES IN REFORESTATION PLOTS ON DEGRADED PASTURES AND IN NEIGHBORING PRISTINE TROPICAL MOUNTAIN RAIN FOREST

For the first time in tropical mountain rain forest, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal richness and community composition was investigated from planted seedlings of Cedrela montana, Heliocarpus americanus, Juglans neotropica and Tabebuia chrysantha in reforestation plots on degraded pastures. A segment...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: AGUIRRE MENDOZA, NIKOLAY ARTURO (author)
Other Authors: INGEBORG HAUG, TESFAYE WUBET (author), MICHAEL WEIß, MICHAEL WEBER (author), SVEN GÜNTER, INGRID KOTTKE (author)
Format: article
Language:spa
Published: 2010
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Online Access:http://dspace.unl.edu.ec/jspui/handle/123456789/198
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Summary:For the first time in tropical mountain rain forest, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal richness and community composition was investigated from planted seedlings of Cedrela montana, Heliocarpus americanus, Juglans neotropica and Tabebuia chrysantha in reforestation plots on degraded pastures. A segment of fungal 18S rDNA was sequenced from the mycorrhizas. Sequences were compared with those obtained from mycorrhizas of adult trees of 30 species in the neighboring, pristine tropical mountain rain forest. In total, 193 glomeromycotan sequences were analyzed, 130 of them previously unpublished. Members of Glomeraceae, Acaulosporaceae, Gigasporaceae and Archaeosporales were found in both habitats, with Glomus Group A sequences being by far the most diverse and abundant. Glomus Group A sequence type richness did not appear to differ between the habitats; a large number was observed in both. Glomus Group A sequence type composition, however, was found distinctly different. Seedlings were rarely colonized by fungi of the pristine forest but trapped a number of fungi known from other areas, which were rarely found in the pristine forest