نتایج جستجو برای: fungi decomposition

تعداد نتایج: 143130  

Journal: :مدیریت خاک و تولید پایدار 0
سیداسماعیل رضوی هیات علمی بهنام کامکار هیات علمی حمید رضا صادقی پور هیات علمی دانشگاه گلستان

investigating the decomposition of crop residues using woodborn and soilborn saprophytic fungi this experiment was conduceted to evaluate the effect of some fungi on decomposition of crop residues. crop residues from rice, wheat, cotton, canola and soybean were inoculated with pleurotus ostreatus, phanerochaete chrysoporium, aspergillus niger and trichoderma viride in vitro. after 30 days, hemi...

Journal: :Ecology 2006
Anna M Romaní Helmut Fischer Cecilia Mille-Lindblom Lars J Tranvik

Fungi and bacteria are key agents in plant litter decomposition in freshwater ecosystems. However, the specific roles of these two groups and their interactions during the decomposition process are unclear. We compared the growth and patterns of degradative enzymes expressed by communities of bacteria and fungi grown separately and in coexistence on Phragmites leaves. The two groups displayed b...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology reviews 2005
Wietse de Boer Larissa B Folman Richard C Summerbell Lynne Boddy

The colonization of land by plants appears to have coincided with the appearance of mycorrhiza-like fungi. Over evolutionary time, fungi have maintained their prominent role in the formation of mycorrhizal associations. In addition, however, they have been able to occupy other terrestrial niches of which the decomposition of recalcitrant organic matter is perhaps the most remarkable. This impli...

2017
Preetisri Baskaran

Soils in terrestrial ecosystems store more carbon (C) than plants and the atmosphere combined, and ecosystems’ C dynamics are strongly dependent of nitrogen (N) availability. Moreover, plant production in boreal ecosystems is often limited by low N availability, and N retention in soils is a major constraint on N recirculation to plants. Soil fungi strongly influence C and N interactions in bor...

2008
J. M. Talbot S. D. Allison K. K. Treseder

1. In the conventional view of soil carbon (C) cycling, mycorrhizal fungi are primarily considered vectors for plant C input to soils. However, there is accumulating evidence that mycorrhizal fungi may also contribute to the direct loss of soil C by acting as decomposers, that is by producing extracellular lytic enzymes and metabolizing soil C. 2. Most of the evidence that mycorrhizal fungi can...

2000
ELLIS B. COWLING

Decomposition of wood is an important part of the carbon cycle of nature. Decomposition is caused by fungi, insects, and marine borers that use the wood as food or shelter, or both. Lignin in wood provides a physical barrier to enzymatic decomposition of cellulose and hemicelluloses. This barrier is breached mechanically by insects and marine borers, biochemically by whiteand soft-rot fungi, an...

Journal: :Applied microbiology 1962
T CHAKRAVARTY R G BOSE S N BASU

Special media suitable for the isolation of fungi growing on jute were developed. Species that would better resist sunlight, such as organisms with dark hyphae and spores or closed fruit bodies, predominated on weather-exposed fabrics. Several strongly cellulolytic organisms not previously implicated in fiber decomposition were isolated from this source. On the other hand, the fungi obtained fr...

Journal: :E3S web of conferences 2021

Fungi play an essential role in carbon cycle by decomposing the litter and woody fibers. This study aims to establish a model for describing decomposition multiple fungal activities different environment. We Colony Distribution-Decomposition Model simulate interaction between various fungi describe relationship activity decomposition, which is divided into three sub-models: single colony growth...

Journal: :Ecology letters 2006
J Adam Langley Samantha K Chapman Bruce A Hungate

The amount of carbon plants allocate to mycorrhizal symbionts exceeds that emitted by human activity annually. Senescent ectomycorrhizal roots represent a large input of carbon into soils, but their fate remains unknown. Here, we present the surprising result that, despite much higher nitrogen concentrations, roots colonized by ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi lost only one-third as much carbon as no...

2007
Vibha Asha Sinha

The colonization pattern and extent of decay produced in paddy stubble by soil inhabiting mycoflora were done by using nylon net bag technique. Among the three methods used for isolation of fungi, dilution plate technique recorded the highest number of fungi followed by damp chamber and direct observation method. Nutrient availability and climatic conditions (temperature, humidity and rainfall)...

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