Mycorrhizas can produce negative crop responses when
phosphorus availability is sufficient in agricultural soils
because the fungi are of no benefit in nutrient acquisition
yet continue to colonize roots and invoke parasitic costs.
Benomyl fungicide was used to test this prediction in the
field by limiting mycorrhizal colonization of 2-yr-old
Valencia orange trees (Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck) on
four rootstocks of varying mycorrhizal dependency in P-deficient
soil fertilized with and without phosphate. No known fungal
pathogens of citrus roots controlled by
benomyl were present on the trees or in the field soil. Young
trees with or without P fertilization and benomyl
treatment remained sufficient in P ([ges ]0·10% leaf P) throughout
the 27-month study. Root zone drenches of
benomyl reduced mycorrhizal colonization and leaf P status of
Valencia orange trees on the three slower-growing
rootstocks, trifoliate orange (Poncirus trifoliata (L. ) Raf.),
Swingle citrumelo (Citrus paradisi Macf.×P. trifoliata)
and sour orange (Citrus aurantium L.), for the duration of
three growing seasons. Benomyl affected root
colonization and P status of trees on the faster-growing
rootstock, Volkamer lemon (Citrus volkameriana Tan. and
Pasq.), less than for trees on the slower-growing rootstocks
and the effects were sustained for only two seasons.
The shorter duration of benomyl effect for trees on Volkamer
lemon rootstock compared with the slower-growing
rootstocks was explained by the loss of inhibition of
mycorrhizal activity when roots grew out of the drench zone
and mycorrhizas were no longer in direct contact with the
fungicide. Benomyl treatment increased growth rate of
Valencia orange on the slow-growing rootstocks from 5 to 17%
after three seasons, and from 2 to 9% on Volkamer
lemon rootstock after two seasons compared with the non-benomyl
treated trees. The benomyl effect was
attributed to reduction of costs of root colonization over time,
and consequently, a greater availability of carbon
assimilate for shoot growth of trees. Since mycorrhizal fungi
are ubiquitous in fertilized agricultural soils and
obligate biotrophs on the roots of most crop species, these
results indicate a need to further investigate whether
negative growth responses of P-sufficient plants in the field
occur because mycorrhizal fungi are no longer
behaving as mutualists.