Inoculation with Oidiodendron maius BP Improves Nitrogen Absorption from Fertilizer and Growth of Vaccinium corymbosum during the Early Nursery Stage

Plants (Basel). 2023 Feb 10;12(4):792. doi: 10.3390/plants12040792.

Abstract

Blueberry roots are inefficient in taking up water and nutrients, a fact partially related to their scarcity of root hairs, but they improve nutrient uptake by associating with ericoid mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi. However, the benefits of this association are both cultivar- and fungus-dependent. Our objective was to assess the effect of inoculation with three native fungal strains (Oidiodendron maius A, O. maius BP, and Acanthomyces lecanii BC) on plantlet growth, plantlet survival, and nitrogen (N) absorption of the southern highbush blueberry (SHB) cultivars Biloxi and Misty. The fungal strains were inoculated into the peat-based substrate for growing blueberry cultivars, and plantlets produced by micropropagation were transplanted and grown for four months. The three inoculated strains positively affected the survival percentage in at least one of the cultivars tested, whereas O. maius BP positively affected plant biomass, N derived from fertilizer absorption, N content, and plant N recovery (%) in both Biloxi and Misty. Our results show that the O. maius BP strain may prove useful as a bio-inoculant to improve blueberry production during the nursery stage.

Keywords: blueberry plantlets; fungal strains; nitrogen absorption; tagged nitrogen.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by Universidad Nacional de Lomas de Zamora, grant Lomas CyT Resol. C.S. /043 (Title: “Distribución y acumulación del nitrógeno en arándano alto del sur (Vaccinium corymbosum L) según su momento de aplicación y evaluación del efecto de los hongos endófitos en su absorción según sustrato utilizado”.