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Effect of soil-pollution on symbiotic colonization and spore population dynamics of endo-mycorrhiza

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Title Effect of soil-pollution on symbiotic colonization and spore population dynamics of endo-mycorrhiza
 
Creator Neeraj
Yadav, Kamlesh
 
Description 80-87
Root colonization by vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and its spore population dynamics in pollution-free and polluted
soil was studied. AM fungal colonization, formation of arbuscules and vesicles and respective spore counts were comparatively
lower in polluted soil. Maximum colonisation in polluted area near thermal power plant was up to 35-60% and highest spore
count was up to 75-95 spores per 100 gm air-dried soil which were 50-80% and 121-168 spores/ 100 gm soil in pollution-free
sites. Polluted areas near paper mill or sugar mill had VAM colonization up to 20-25% only and spore count was 52-60 spores/
100 g soil where as in non-polluted sites these were 58-71 % and 120-145 spores/lOO gm soil. AM spore counts were
comparatively higher in soil samples collected in October and February months as compared to those found in summer and
rainy seasons. Species of Acaulospora and Glomus were dominating the AM fungal spore populations where as Entrophospora
sp. and Scutellospora sp. spore population were the lowest.
 
Date 2009-02-19T04:55:19Z
2009-02-19T04:55:19Z
2007-06
 
Type Article
 
Identifier 0771-7706
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3189
 
Language en_US
 
Publisher CSIR
 
Source BVAAP Vol.15(1) [June 2007]