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Data from: The ectomycorrhizal fungus Paxillus ammoniavirescens influences the effects of salinity on loblolly pine in response to potassium availability

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posted on 2025-08-19, 02:35 authored by Benjamin Rose, Marissa Dellinger, Clancy Larmour, Mira Polishook, Maria Higuita-Aguirre, Summi Dutta, Rachel Cook, Sabine Zimmermann, Kevin Garcia
<p>Salinity is an increasing problem in coastal areas affected by saltwater intrusion, with deleterious effects on tree health and forest growth. Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi may improve salinity tolerance of host trees, but the impact of external potassium (K<sup>+</sup>) availability on these effects is still unclear. Here, we performed several experiments with the ECM fungus <em>Paxillus</em><em> </em><em>ammoniavirescens</em> and loblolly pine (<em>Pinus </em><em>taeda</em> L.) in axenic and symbiotic conditions at limited or sufficient K<sup>+</sup> and increasing sodium (Na<sup>+</sup>) concentrations. Growth rate, biomass, nutrient content, and K<sup>+</sup> transporter expression levels were recorded for the fungus, and the colonization rate, root development parameters, biomass, and shoot nutrient accumulation were determined for mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plants. <em>P. </em><em>ammoniavirescens</em> was tolerant to high salinity, although growth and nutrient concentrations varied with K<sup>+</sup> availability and increasing Na<sup>+</sup> exposure. While loblolly pine root growth and development decreased with increasing salinity, ECM colonization was unaffected by pine response to salinity. The mycorrhizal influence on loblolly pine salinity response was strongly dependent on external K<sup>+</sup> availability. This study reveals that <em>P. </em><em>ammoniavirescens</em> can reduce Na<sup>+</sup> accumulation of salt-exposed loblolly pine, but this effect depends on external K<sup>+</sup> availability.</p>

Funding

USDA

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

History

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Data contact name

Garcia, Kevin

Data contact email

kgarcia2@ncsu.edu

Publisher

Dryad

Theme

  • Not specified

ISO Topic Category

  • biota

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

growth and development; biomass; mycorrhizal fungi; potassium; nutrient content; saltwater intrusion; salt tolerance; ectomycorrhizae; Pinus taeda; sodium; Paxillus; fungi; root growth; salinity; tree health; forest growth

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Public Access Level

  • Public

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