In this stage, we investigated the rank of Arbuscular Mycorrhiza Fungi (AMF) living natural symbiotically accompanying different sizes of the acacia. Regardless of forest class or size, AMF provoked varying points of root colonisation and infection in Acacia tortilis, Acacia ehrenbergiana, and Acacia gerrardii. A. ehrenbergiana medium magnitude was found to have the chief infection overall at the Raudhat Khuraim station (70%) and was followed by A. tortilis short amount (60%), A. gerrardii medium size (58.7%), and short length (57.7%) at the Washlah location. A. gerrardii large size had rude infection rate in Khuraim (6%). The maximum vesicles were about A. tortilis large (95%) understood by A. ehrenbergiana medium (91%) at Khuraim, A. tortilis medium (67.3) at Washlah, A. gerrardii and A. tortilis short size (51.7),(50.0) at Khuraim and Huraymila. The minimum was written with A. gerrardii medium (4%) in Khuraim. At Washlah, large size for clothing A. torilis had the lowest contamination rate (4.7%). In each individual tree, the force of contamination and spore society varied widely and alone. The medium size A. gerrardii at Washlah had ultimate spores (230), while the short size A. gerrardii in Khuraim had the lean (21). In conclusion, our findings show that AMF contamination is most common in the ancestries of short acacia trees, trailed by medium-judge trees, and smallest common in abundant trees.
Author(s) Details:
Kamal Hassan Suliman,
Department of Soil and Water Sciences, Faculty
of Natural Resources and Environmental Studies, University of Kordofan, P.O
Box-160, El obied, Sudan and Department of Soil Sciences, College of Food and
Agriculture Sciences, King Saud University, P.O. Box-2640, Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia.
Fahad
Nasser Al-Barakah,
Department
of Soil Sciences, College of Food and Agriculture Sciences, King Saud
University, P.O. Box-2640, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Abdulaziz Muhmmad Assaeed,
Department of Plant Production, College of Food and Agriculture Sciences,
King Saud University, P.O. Box-2640, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Khalid M. Al-Rohily,
National Research and Development Center for Sustainable Agriculture
(Estidamah), Riyadh Techno Valley, Riyadh-12373, Saudi Arabia.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/CERB-V5/article/view/9786
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