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Ectomycorrhizal fungi in mineral soil
Mineralogical Magazine, 2008AbstractEctomycorrhizal fungi are mutualistic symbionts of many forest trees and play a major role in nutrient uptake. They form diverse communities in boreal forest soils but functional differences within this group of fungi remain largely unknown.
A. Rosling, N. Rosenstock
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Ectomycorrhizal fungi of Kashmir forests
Mycorrhiza, 1992All the macromycetes recorded in Kashmir and suspected to be mycorrhizal (77 taxa) are discussed in the context of the vegetational communities of Kashmir.
R. Watling, S. P. Abraham
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Production of Inoculum of Ectomycorrhizal Fungi
2002Mass cultivation of EM fungi has been discussed in this chapter. Different types of inocula are used — natural air-borne spores, soil inocula, nursery seedlings, sporophores/spores and vegetative mycelia. Fungi are grown axenically, selected and maintained for experimental studies. Ectomycorrhizal fungi are grown on semisynthetic media.
S. Kumar, T. Satyanarayana
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Ectomycorrhizal fungi of Pinus pinaster
Mycorrhiza, 1995A study was undertaken to determine the ability to form ectomycorrhizae with Pinus pinaster Ait. in pure culture syntheses of 98 isolates of putative mycorrhizal fungi, mainly collected in northern Spain. A total of 35 species in 16 genera — Amanita, Cenococcum, Collybia, Cortinarius, Hebeloma, Laccaria, Lactarius, Lyophyllum, Melanogaster, Paxillus ...
Joan Pera, Isabel F. Alvarez
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Ectomycorrhizal fungi as experimental organisms
1996Ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi can be grown in surface, submerged as well as solid state cultivations. While growing, EM fungi excrete several enzymes, phytohormones, siderophores, antimicrobial substances as well as organic acids like oxalic acid. These are slow growing fungi with a doubling time of around 50 hours.
T. Satyanarayana +2 more
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Genetic Transformation of Ectomycorrhizal Fungi
1995If Albert Einstein had investigated ectomycorrhizal symbiosis, he might well have devised a formula for same to read as follows: E = mc2, where the efficiency (E) of the symbiosis is somehow related to the mass (m) of mycelium colonizing the cortex (c) of the plant root. Granted such a formula is far too empirical to be taken seriously, but nonetheless
P. A. Lemke, N. K. Singh, U. A. Temann
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RNA Silencing in Ectomycorrhizal Fungi
2010The symbiotic phase in the life-cycle of ectomycorrhizal basidiomycetes is the dikaryon. Thus, fungal studies on symbiotic gene function would require the inactivation of both gene copies in the dikaryotic mycelium. Several unsuccessful attempts have demonstrated that with the low homologous recombination rates shown by this group of fungi such double ...
Minna J. Kemppainen, Alejandro G. Pardo
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Environment and host as large-scale controls of ectomycorrhizal fungi
Nature, 2018S. Linde +44 more
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