نتایج جستجو برای: endomycorrhizae

تعداد نتایج: 588  

2017
Xihui Xu Chen Chen Zhou Zhang Zehua Sun Yahua Chen Jiandong Jiang Zhenguo Shen

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) affect multiple ecosystem functions and processes, the assemblages of which vary across ecosystems. However, the influences of environmental factors on AMF communities which may shape these communities are still largely unknown. In this study, AMF communities from roots and rhizosphere soils of Chenopodium ambrosioides in different natural soils were investiga...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1999
C Del Val J M Barea C Azcón-Aguilar

High concentrations of heavy metals have been shown to adversely affect the size, diversity, and activity of microbial populations in soil. The aim of this work was to determine how the diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi is affected by the addition of sewage-amended sludge containing heavy metals in a long-term experiment. Due to the reduced number of indigenous AM fungal (AMF) prop...

Journal: :Annual review of plant physiology and plant molecular biology 1999
Maria J. Harrison

Arbuscular mycorrhizae are symbiotic associations formed between a wide range of plant species including angiosperms, gymnosperms, pteridophytes, and some bryophytes, and a limited range of fungi belonging to a single order, the Glomales. The symbiosis develops in the plant roots where the fungus colonizes the apoplast and cells of the cortex to access carbon supplied by the plant. The fungal c...

2012
Guido Lingua Elisa Bona Valeria Todeschini Chiara Cattaneo Francesco Marsano Graziella Berta Maria Cavaletto

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi establish a mutualistic symbiosis with the roots of most plant species. While receiving photosynthates, they improve the mineral nutrition of the plant and can also increase its tolerance towards some pollutants, like heavy metals. Although the fungal symbionts exclusively colonize the plant roots, some plant responses can be systemic. Therefore, in this work a...

2012
Olga Shibistova Yonas Yohannes Jens Boy Andreas Richter Birgit Wild Margarethe Watzka Georg Guggenberger

BACKGROUND Anthropogenic disturbance of old-growth tropical forests increases the abundance of early successional tree species at the cost of late successional ones. Quantifying differences in terms of carbon allocation and the proportion of recently fixed carbon in soil CO(2) efflux is crucial for addressing the carbon footprint of creeping degradation. METHODOLOGY We compared the carbon all...

2017
Seitaro Deguchi Yosuke Matsuda Chisato Takenaka Yuki Sugiura Hajime Ozawa Yoshimune Ogata

This study proposed a rapid method to quantify the colonization rate of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) in plant roots. The method involved the use of an image analysis software (WinRHIZO Pro). The colonization rate is defined as the ratio of the fungal body to the plant root area in a micrograph. Three seedlings of Chengiopanax sciadophylloides, a woody species that accumulates radiocesium,...

2017
Gabriele Casazza Erica Lumini Enrico Ercole Francesco Dovana Maria Guerrina Annamaria Arnulfo Luigi Minuto Anna Fusconi Marco Mucciarelli

Berardia subacaulis Vill. is a monospecific genus that is endemic to the South-western Alps, where it grows on alpine screes, which are extreme habitats characterized by soil disturbance and limiting growth conditions. Root colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) is presumably of great importance in these environments, because of its positive effect on plant nutrition and stress tole...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2002
U A Hartwig P Wittmann R Braun B Hartwig-Räz J Jansa A Mozafar A Lüscher A Leuchtmann E Frossard J Nösberger

Elevated atmospheric pCO(2) increases the C-availability for plants and thus leads to a comparable increase in plant biomass production and nutrient demand. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) are considered to play an important role in the nutrient uptake of plants as well as to be a significant C-sink. Therefore, an increased colonization of plant roots by AMF is expected under elevated atmosp...

2016
Daniel J. Ballhorn Martin Schädler Jacob D. Elias Jess A. Millar Stefanie Kautz

Plant associations with root microbes represent some of the most important symbioses on earth. While often critically promoting plant fitness, nitrogen-fixing rhizobia and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) also demand significant carbohydrate allocation in exchange for key nutrients. Though plants may often compensate for carbon loss, constraints may arise under light limitation when plants ca...

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