Plant neighborhood control of arbuscular mycorrhizal community composition.

PubWeight™: 1.32‹?› | Rank: Top 10%

🔗 View Article (PMID 19496954)

Published in New Phytol on June 03, 2009

Authors

Natasha Teutsch Hausmann1, Christine V Hawkes

Author Affiliations

1: Department of Integrative Biology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.

Articles citing this

Going back to the roots: the microbial ecology of the rhizosphere. Nat Rev Microbiol (2013) 2.73

Positive feedback between mycorrhizal fungi and plants influences plant invasion success and resistance to invasion. PLoS One (2010) 1.38

The role of local environment and geographical distance in determining community composition of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi at the landscape scale. ISME J (2012) 1.11

Contrasting arbuscular mycorrhizal communities colonizing different host plants show a similar response to a soil phosphorus concentration gradient. New Phytol (2013) 1.08

Phylogenetic and trait-based assembly of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities. PLoS One (2012) 1.08

Evolutionary ecology of mycorrhizal functional diversity in agricultural systems. Evol Appl (2010) 1.01

TaqMan real-time PCR assays to assess arbuscular mycorrhizal responses to field manipulation of grassland biodiversity: effects of soil characteristics, plant species richness, and functional traits. Appl Environ Microbiol (2010) 0.93

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities are phylogenetically clustered at small scales. ISME J (2014) 0.91

Plant kin recognition enhances abundance of symbiotic microbial partner. PLoS One (2012) 0.88

A common garden test of host-symbiont specificity supports a dominant role for soil type in determining AMF assemblage structure in Collinsia sparsiflora. PLoS One (2013) 0.85

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi reduce the differences in competitiveness between dominant and subordinate plant species. Mycorrhiza (2012) 0.84

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal community differs between a coexisting native shrub and introduced annual grass. Mycorrhiza (2012) 0.84

More closely related plants have more distinct mycorrhizal communities. AoB Plants (2014) 0.83

Selectivity by host plants affects the distribution of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi: evidence from ITS rDNA sequence metadata. BMC Evol Biol (2012) 0.83

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal community divergence within a common host plant in two different soils in a subarctic Aeolian sand area. Mycorrhiza (2014) 0.82

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal community response to warming and nitrogen addition in a semiarid steppe ecosystem. Mycorrhiza (2014) 0.81

Competition and soil resource environment alter plant-soil feedbacks for native and exotic grasses. AoB Plants (2014) 0.81

Diversity effects on productivity are stronger within than between trophic groups in the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis. PLoS One (2012) 0.80

Plant Communities Rather than Soil Properties Structure Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Communities along Primary Succession on a Mine Spoil. Front Microbiol (2017) 0.79

What goes in must come out: testing for biases in molecular analysis of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities. PLoS One (2014) 0.78

Environmental controls on fungal community composition and abundance over 3 years in native and degraded shrublands. Microb Ecol (2014) 0.77

Community assembly and coexistence in communities of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. ISME J (2016) 0.77

Contrasting the community structure of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi from hydrocarbon-contaminated and uncontaminated soils following willow (Salix spp. L.) planting. PLoS One (2014) 0.76

Stressed out symbiotes: hypotheses for the influence of abiotic stress on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Oecologia (2016) 0.75

Rapid response of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities to short-term fertilization in an alpine grassland on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. PeerJ (2016) 0.75

Linking the community structure of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and plants: a story of interdependence? ISME J (2017) 0.75

Grassland invaders and their mycorrhizal symbionts: a study across climate and invasion gradients. Ecol Evol (2014) 0.75

Asymmetric response of root-associated fungal communities of an arbuscular mycorrhizal grass and an ectomycorrhizal tree to their coexistence in primary succession. Mycorrhiza (2017) 0.75

Soil microbial communities alter leaf chemistry and influence allelopathic potential among coexisting plant species. Oecologia (2017) 0.75