The influence of three organic compounds and bakers' dry yeast
on growth of external mycelium and phosphorus
uptake of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices
Schenck & Smith (BEG 87) was examined. Two
experiments were carried out in compartmentalized growth systems with root-free
sand or soil compartments. The
sand and soil in the root-free compartments were left untreated or uniformly
mixed with one of the following
substrates (0.5 mg g−1 soil): bakers' dry yeast,
bovine serum albumin, starch or cellulose. Effects of the organic
substrates on biomass and hyphal length density of the arbuscular mycorrhizal
fungus were examined by using
specific fatty acid signatures in combination with direct microscopy. Micro-organisms
other than the arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungus were measured by fatty acid signatures, and radioactive
33P labelling of the root-free soil was
used to determine arbuscular mycorrhizal hyphal phosphorus uptake. In general,
hyphal growth of G. intraradices
was enhanced by yeast and bovine serum albumin, whereas the carbon sources,
starch and cellulose, depressed
fungal growth. By analysing the fatty acid 16[ratio ]1ω5 from phospholipids
(indicating mycelium) and neutral lipids
(indicating storage structures) it was shown that increased fungal growth
due to yeast was mainly in vegetative
hyphae and less in storage structures. Arbuscular mycorrhizal hyphal phosphorus
uptake was decreased by
cellulose, but unaffected by the other substrates compared with the control.
This means that both growth and
phosphorus transport by the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus were decreased
under cellulose treatment. However,
the composition of the microbial community varied under different substrate
conditions indicating a possible
interactive component with arbuscular mycorrhizal hyphal growth and phosphorus
uptake.