4.7 Article

Yield and phosphorus uptake of a processing tomato crop grown at different phosphorus levels in a calcareous soil as affected by mycorrhizal inoculation under field conditions

Journal

BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 691-703

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-012-0757-3

Keywords

Glomus intraradices; Root colonization; P concentration; Inoculation effectiveness; Plant reproductive traits

Categories

Funding

  1. Italpollina SpA (Rivoli, VR, Italy) company

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We have evaluated the effectiveness of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) inoculation (+M and -M) at 0, 60, and 120 kg ha(-1) of P fertilizer on crop growth (IEg), plant P nutrition and yield (IEy), and on mycorrhization occurrence in a processing tomato crop. Two experiments were carried out in calcareous soil under field conditions. Phosphorus fertilization had no effect on crop growth and yield. At harvests, +M plants showed higher aerial dry weight, fruit fresh weight, and P concentration. Inoculated plants produced larger inflorescences, higher flower number, and total and marketable fruit number compared with -M plants. At P-0 and P-60, plants associated with exogenous AMF were able to enhance P recovery, nevertheless factors other than the P uptake improvement concurred to make the inoculation effective. In both years, P fertilization enhanced IEg and IEy, and the application of 60 kg ha(-1) of P in inoculated soil was enough to reach high production level (134 Mg ha(-1)). In the first trial, due to earlier root mycorrhization in inoculated and P fertilized soil, higher IEg and IEy were obtained compared with the second experiment. In the latter, during the initial phase, plant growth was more affected by P fertilization than by soil arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) inoculation. Root mycorrhization by native AM fungi indicates that the intensive management of the investigated agro-system did not depress fungi infectivity; however, it caused the selection of less effective AMF. The application of selected AMF as a biofertilizer may represent an innovative ecosustainable practice for improving the crop profitability for growers while reducing the need for P fertilization.

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