نتایج جستجو برای: forest fungi

تعداد نتایج: 149383  

2015
Kevin Garcia Jean-Michel Ané

Fungi are major players in the carbon cycle in forest ecosystems due to the wide range of interactions they have with plants either through soil degradation processes by litter decayers or biotrophic interactions with pathogenic and ectomycorrhizal symbionts. Secretion of fungal proteins mediates these interactions by allowing the fungus to interact with its environment and/or host. Ectomycorrh...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2015
Sydney I Glassman Kabir G Peay Jennifer M Talbot Dylan P Smith Judy A Chung John W Taylor Rytas Vilgalys Thomas D Bruns

Ecologists have long acknowledged the importance of seed banks; yet, despite the fact that many plants rely on mycorrhizal fungi for survival and growth, the structure of ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungal spore banks remains poorly understood. The primary goal of this study was to assess the geographic structure in pine-associated ECM fungal spore banks across the North American continent. Soils wer...

2005
Antonio D. Izzo Marc Meyer James M. Trappe Thomas D. Bruns

The purpose of this study was to estimate the portion of an ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi root community with a hypogeous fruiting habit. We used molecular methods (DNA sequence analysis of the internally transcribed spacer [ITS] region of rDNA) to compare three viewpoints: ECM fungi on the roots in a southern Sierra Nevada Abies-dominated old-growth forest, fungi in scat samples collected from s...

Journal: :Current Biology 2011
Jonathan M. Plett Minna Kemppainen Shiv D. Kale Annegret Kohler Valérie Legué Annick Brun Brett M. Tyler Alejandro G. Pardo Francis Martin

Soil-borne mutualistic fungi, such as the ectomycorrhizal fungi, have helped shape forest communities worldwide over the last 180 million years through a mutualistic relationship with tree roots in which the fungal partner provides a large array of nutrients to the plant host in return for photosynthetically derived sugars. This exchange is essential for continued growth and productivity of for...

Journal: :Environmental microbiology 2016
Lucia Žifčáková Tomáš Větrovský Adina Howe Petr Baldrian

Understanding the ecology of coniferous forests is very important because these environments represent globally largest carbon sinks. Metatranscriptomics, microbial community and enzyme analyses were combined to describe the detailed role of microbial taxa in the functioning of the Picea abies-dominated coniferous forest soil in two contrasting seasons. These seasons were the summer, representi...

2016
Kai Yin Lei Zhang Dima Chen Yichen Tian Feifei Zhang Meiping Wen Chao Yuan

The patterns and drivers of soil microbial communities in forest plantations remain inadequate although they have been extensively studied in natural forest and grassland ecosystems. In this study, using data from 12 subtropical plantation sites, we found that the overstory tree biomass and tree cover increased with increasing plantation age. However, there was a decline in the aboveground biom...

Journal: :Research, Society and Development 2022

Small conservation areas have been created in many countries usually to protect plants and animals, but no priorities are deserved protecting fungi. The creation of preservation is meeting a new problem: there only small remaining areas, since exploration destroying large forests. Applying the technique transects three different Brazil (Pampa Cerrado biomes Amazonian Forest), diversity ecologic...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2011
Peter Högberg Christian Johannisson Stephanie Yarwood Ingeborg Callesen Torgny Näsholm David D Myrold Mona N Högberg

Trees reduce their carbon (C) allocation to roots and mycorrhizal fungi in response to high nitrogen (N) additions, which should reduce the N retention capacity of forests. The time needed for recovery of mycorrhizas after termination of N loading remains unknown. Here, we report the long-term impact of N loading and the recovery of ectomycorrhiza after high N loading on a Pinus sylvestris fore...

2015
Milon Dvorak Gabriela Rotkova Leticia Botella Jan Stenlid Jonas Oliva Audrius Menkis

Hymenoscyphus fraxineus is an invasive fungal species causing the most serious disease of ashes (Fraxinus spp.) in Europe—ash dieback. The biology of this fungus is not totally elucidated, neither its relation to the saprophytic species Hymenoscyphus albidus, native in Europe. Our study is focused on the description of seasonal spore dispersal of both fungi and its relation to meteorological co...

Journal: :Global change biology 2017
Christopher W Fernandez Nhu H Nguyen Artur Stefanski Ying Han Sarah E Hobbie Rebecca A Montgomery Peter B Reich Peter G Kennedy

Rising temperatures associated with climate change have been shown to negatively affect the photosynthetic rates of boreal forest tree saplings at their southern range limits. To quantify the responses of ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungal communities associated with poorly performing hosts, we sampled the roots of Betula papyrifera and Abies balsamea saplings growing in the B4Warmed (Boreal Forest Wa...

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