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Ectomycorrhizal fungi may not act as a barrier inhibiting host plant absorption of heavy metals.

Chemosphere 2019 January
Whether the huge external hyphal system of ectomycorrhizae that promotes host plants' acquisition of water and nutrients can selectively inhibit their transport of heavy metals at the same time remains unclear. In this experiment, we designed and conducted two types of soil-pot test to clarify the effects of EMF on the absorption and transport of copper (Cu) and cadmium (Cd) by host Pinus thunbergii seedlings. In the root-bag test, external hyphae took the initiative into the Cu/Cd-contaminated bulk soil, absorb and transport Cu and Cd to the rhizosphere soils and further transport it to the shoots of the host plants. Inoculation with EMF also promoted the uptake of nutrients by host plants, thereby increasing their biomass and improving Cu/Cd tolerance compared with non-inoculated plants. Inoculation with EMF species with higher Cu or Cd tolerance generated more phytostabilization and phytoextraction of Cu or Cd by host plants. In a short-term exposure test, inoculation with EMF accelerated the absorption of Cu and Cd by P. thunbergii within 12 h of Cu or Cd irrigation. Therefore, we concluded that EMF do not act as a barrier inhibiting the absorption of heavy metals by host plants, but rather promote this absorption. Improving the plant's nutritional status and promoting growth, diluting heavy metal concentrations, thereby reducing the toxic effects of heavy metals on host plants. These results provide the theoretical basis for the application of EMF in plant-microbial combinations for the phytostabilization and phytoextraction of heavy metal-contaminated soils.

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