Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/668963
Title: Agricultural systems in Amazonia depend on the management of mycorrhizal fungi.
Authors: FELDMANN, F.
IDCZAK, E.
NUNES, C. D. M.
Affiliation: CLEY DONIZETI MARTINS NUNES, CPAA.
Date Issued: 1995
Citation: In: SYMPOSIUM ON THE MANAGEMENT AND REHABILITATION OF DEGRADED AREAS AND SECONDARY FORESTS IN AMAZONIA, 1993, Santarém. Proceedings... Rio Piedras: International Institute of Tropical Forestry/USDA - Forest Service, 1995.
Pages: p. 54-61.
Description: A large number of useful tropical plant species are dependent on mycorrhizal fungi. Without the fungal symbionts they show growth depression and lower tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. In plant production systems, common management practices normally result in symbiosis deficits. In tropical regions where the system of shifting cultivation is practiced, the fallow period was thought to have a positive regulating effect on the mycorrhizal situation. It's showed that between three and eight years of fallow there is an increase of the inoculum potential in the soils but the effectivity of the fungal populations remains very low in comparison to the populations from natural sites. The need to manage the mycorrhizal fungi in situ in the field is discussed.
Thesagro: Conservação do Solo
Floresta Tropical Úmida
Manejo
Micorriza
NAL Thesaurus: multiple cropping
mycorrhizae
soil conservation
tropical rain forests
vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizae
Keywords: Multiplo cultivo
Brasil
Amazonas
Manaus
Management
Type of Material: Artigo em anais e proceedings
Access: openAccess
Appears in Collections:Artigo em anais de congresso (CPAA)

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