The effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) on plant growth was examined in two wild plant species belonging to contrasting functional types: an annual forb (Bidens pilosa, Asteraceae) and a deciduous shrub (Acacia caven, Fabaceae) at three contrasting plant densities (one, two, and three individuals per pot). AMF had a slightly negative effect on B. pilosa when the species grew in isolation while they positively affected A. caven. Positive effects of AMF on shoot mass of A. caven decreased at higher plant densities, while shoot mass of individuals of B. pilosa showed less marked differences between plant densities. When considering total biomass per pot, AMF positively affected A. caven growth while negatively affecting B. pilosa, at all three plant densities. Root/shoot ratio per pot was negatively affected by AMF but not plant density in both species. These findings highlight the importance of including plants belonging to different life forms and/or traits in research regarding the interaction between AMF and intraspecific plant competition.
SporeSata lab-on-a-chip (LOC) centrifuge platform designed for integration as the payload of a small (5.5 kg), freeflying satellitehas been developed to determine the gravitational thresholds for calcium-ion channel activation of a single-cell spore from the fern Ceratopteris richardii. This fern is an important model system for gravity-directed plant-cell development during variable-gravity conditions attainable only in space flight. Calcium-ion channel activity is measured by photolithographically defined calcium ion-selective electrodes (ISEs) at opposite ends of each spore. Artificial gravity is created by rotating a disk-like platform that contains the spores in wells along with the calcium ISEs.Ground experiments reveal a maximum calcium concentration ratio at 2.2xg, between micro-ion-selective electrodes near the "top" and "bottom" ends of the spore, indicating an increasing calcium concentration at one "end" of the fern spore with respect to the other. Confocal micrographs of rhizoid formation confirm the light-induced germination. SporeSat is a spaceflight experiment that will take ~ 4 days; data will be telemetered to Earth over ~ 100 days.
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