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To examine the mechanisms of earlier reported alleviation of fluoride injury in ectomycorrhizal plants by NaCl, jack pine (Pinus banksiana) and white spruce (Picea glauca) seedlings were subjected to 1 mM and 5 mM KF in the presence of either 60 mM NaCl or 10% polyethylene glycol 3350 (PEG) for 2 weeks. Before the treatments, seedlings had either been inoculated with the ectomycorrhizal fungus Suillus tomentosus or remained non-inoculated. The inoculation with S. tomentosus reduced Na uptake by shoots and roots of jack pine seedling and by roots of white spruce that were treated with 60 mM NaCl. Mycorrhizal associations also drastically decreased fluoride uptake by jack pine seedlings, but did not affect shoot fluoride concentrations in white spruce. When NaCl was replaced by PEG in the 5 mM KF treatment solution, shoot fluoride concentrations were reduced by more than twofold without corresponding reductions in transpiration rates in mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal white spruce seedlings. When fluoride was present in the treatment solution, Na concentrations were lower in shoots and roots of both jack pine and white spruce mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal seedlings. The results suggest that Suillus tomentosus may help alleviate the effects of soil fluoride and salinity in jack pine and that fluoride uptake in white spruce is sensitive to osmotic stress.
In the present study, we investigated the effects of pH treatments on NaCl tolerance in mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal American elm. American elm (Ulmus americana) seedlings were inoculated with Hebeloma crustuliniforme, Laccaria bicolor or with both mycorrhizal fungi and subsequently subjected to different pH solutions (pH 3, 6 and 9) containing 0 mM(control) and 60 mMNaCl for 4 weeks. Inoculation with the mycorrhizal fungi did not have a large effect on seedling dry weights when the pH and NaCl treatments were considered independently. However, when the inoculated seedlings were treated with 60 mM NaCl at pH 3 or 6, shoot to root ratios and root hydraulic conductivity were higher compared with non-inoculated plants, likely reflecting changes in seedling water flow properties. At pH 6, transpiration rates were about twofold lower in non-inoculated plants treated with NaCl compared with non-treated controls. For NaCl-treated H. crustuliniforme-and L. bicolor-inoculated plants, the greatest reduction of transpiration rates was at pH 9. Treatment with 60 mM NaCl reduced leaf chlorophyll concentrations more in non-inoculated compared with inoculated plants, with the greatest, twofold, decrease occurring at pH 6. At pH 3, root Na concentrations were higher in inoculated than noninoculated seedlings; however, there was no effect of inoculation on root Na concentrations at pH 6 and 9. Contrary to the roots, the leaves of inoculated plants had lower Na concentrations at pH 6 and 9, but not at pH 3. The results point to an interaction between ECM fungi and root zone pH for salt tolerance of American elm.
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