A study was carried out to determine whether expansion of
marram-grass stands (Ammophila arenaria (L.) Link)
on acidic inner Dutch coastal dunes was caused by
suppressiveness of soils from these stands against three
potential pathogenic fungi of marram grass, namely Fusarium
culmorum (W. G. Sm.) Sacc., Phoma exigua Desm.
and a Ulocladium sp. The suppressiveness of the
acidic inner dune soils was compared with that of lime-rich dune
soils from vigorous and declining marram-grass stands.
Suppressiveness of the dune soils against the saprotrophic
fungi Chaetomium globosum Kunze: Fr, Mucor
hiemalis Wehmer and Trichoderma harzianum
Rifai was also
determined. All fungi had been isolated from marram-grass
roots. Suppressiveness was determined by comparing
the formation of hyphae from potato–dextrose agar
discs into (layer method) or on top of (surface method) dune
soils with that of controls consisting of sterile,
acid-washed beach sand. The growth of the three root-infecting
fungi was strongly inhibited in all soils regardless of
the method used. Hence, there were no indications that the
potential pathogenic fungi were selectively suppressed by
the acidic dune soils and, consequently, the results did
not give any indication for the involvement of a fungal
component in the decline of marram grass. Growth of the
saprotrophs C. globosum and M. hiemalis
was much less inhibited than that of the root-infecting
fungi. Growth of
T. harzianum was strongly inhibited in alkaline
soils but not in the acid ones. The suppression of fungal growth
could be partly or completely eliminated by a microwave
treatment, indicating that biological components of the
soil were essential to suppressiveness. The suppression of
the fungi by colonies of dune soil micro-organisms on
water-agar differed considerably from soil alone. Yet, all
methods indicated the occurrence of general
suppressiveness against fungi by dune soils, irrespective of
the origin of the soil samples. This suppressiveness was
probably not due to direct competition with other soil
micro-organisms for nutrients but to inhibiting compounds
produced by the soil micro-organisms.