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Towards an Enhanced Understanding of Plant-Microbiome Interactions to Improve Phytoremediation: Engineering the MetaorganismThe importance of individuals: intraspecific diversity of mycorrhizal plants and fungi in ecosystems.Mycorrhizal networks affect ectomycorrhizal fungal community similarity between conspecific trees and seedlings.Divergence in ectomycorrhizal communities with foreign Douglas-fir populations and implications for assisted migration.Diversity effects on productivity are stronger within than between trophic groups in the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis.Non-native plants and soil microbes: potential contributors to the consistent reduction in soil aggregate stability caused by the disturbance of North American grasslands.Geographic divergence in a species-rich symbiosis: interactions between monterey pines and ectomycorrhizal fungi.What determines Alnus-associated ectomycorrhizal community diversity and specificity? A comparison of host and habitat effects at a regional scale.Phylogenetic relationships among host plants explain differences in fungal species richness and community composition in ectomycorrhizal symbiosis.Community genetics in the time of next-generation molecular technologies.Mycorrhizal symbiosis and local adaptation in Aster amellus: a field transplant experiment.Microbial community dynamics of soil mesocosms using Orychophragmus violaceus combined with Rhodococcus ruber Em1 for bioremediation of highly PAH-contaminated soil.Phytoremediation: State-of-the-art and a key role for the plant microbiome in future trends and research prospects.Home-field advantage? evidence of local adaptation among plants, soil, and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi through meta-analysis.Linkage between bacterial and fungal rhizosphere communities in hydrocarbon-contaminated soils is related to plant phylogeny.Into and out of the tropics: global diversification patterns in a hyperdiverse clade of ectomycorrhizal fungi.Host shifts enhance diversification of ectomycorrhizal fungi: diversification rate analysis of the ectomycorrhizal fungal genera Strobilomyces and Afroboletus with an 80-gene phylogeny.Dating the fungus-growing termites' mutualism shows a mixture between ancient codiversification and recent symbiont dispersal across divergent hosts.Growth of Arabidopsis seedlings on high fungal doses of Piriformospora indica has little effect on plant performance, stress, and defense gene expression in spite of elevated jasmonic acid and jasmonic acid-isoleucine levels in the roots.Community composition of root-associated fungi in a Quercus-dominated temperate forest: "codominance" of mycorrhizal and root-endophytic fungi.Evolution on the bright side of life: microorganisms and the evolution of mutualism.Mycorrhizal fungi and roots are complementary in foraging within nutrient patches.Is there an association between root architecture and mycorrhizal growth response?Simultaneous adaptation and maladaptation of tree populations to local rhizosphere microbial communities at different taxonomic scales.Ecological genomics of mutualism decline in nitrogen-fixing bacteria.Do trade-offs have explanatory power for the evolution of organismal interactions?Explaining mutualism variation: a new evolutionary paradox?Genetic conflict with a parasitic nematode disrupts the legume-rhizobia mutualismGenetically determined fungal pathogen tolerance and soil variation influence ectomycorrhizal traits of loblolly pine
P2860
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P2860
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on 28 May 2010
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@en
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@nl
type
label
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@en
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@nl
prefLabel
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@en
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@nl
P1433
P1476
Ongoing coevolution in mycorrhizal interactions.
@en
P2093
Jason D Hoeksema
P304
P356
10.1111/J.1469-8137.2010.03305.X
P407
P577
2010-05-28T00:00:00Z