Like all obligately ectomycorrhizal plants, pines require ectomycorrhizal fungal symbionts to complete their life cycle. Pines introduced into regions far from their native range are typically incompatible with local ectomycorrhizal fungi, and, when they invade, coinvade with fungi from their native range. While the identities and distributions of coinvasive fungal symbionts of pine invasions are poorly known, communities that have been studied are notably depauperate. However, it is not yet clear whether any number of fungal coinvaders is able to support a Pinaceae invasion, or whether very depauperate communities are unable to invade. Here, we ask whether there is evidence for a minimum species richness of fungal symbionts necessary to su...
© 2015 by the Ecological Society of America. Biological invasions are a rapidly increasing driver of...
Many ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) are generalists, but most plant genera that form ectomycorrhizas ha...
© 2014 British Ecological Society. Summary: The role of novel ecological interactions between mammal...
Artículo de publicación ISILike all obligately ectomycorrhizal plants, pines require ectomycorrhizal...
Belowground biota can deeply influence plant invasion. The presence of proper soil mutualists can ac...
Pine species have become invasive throughout the globe and threaten to replace native biota. The thr...
We asked if exotic Pinus elliotti seedlings can survive and form ectomycorrhizas at higher elevation...
Purpose: Pinaceae (pine family) trees are native to the Northern Hemisphere and their invasion into ...
Aims: Biological invasions have historically been addressed mostly from an aboveground perspective, ...
Exotic non-native Pinus species have been widely planted or become naturalized in many parts of the ...
marily due to the invasion of birch and pine. This encroachment has been researched in depth from a ...
We used molecular genetic methods to test two hypotheses, (i) that host plant specificity among ecto...
Biological invasions are often complex phenomena because many factors influence their outcome. One k...
It has been proposed that co-invasion with ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi is a common mechanism by which...
1. The role of novel ecological interactions between mammals, fungi and plants in invaded ecosystems...
© 2015 by the Ecological Society of America. Biological invasions are a rapidly increasing driver of...
Many ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) are generalists, but most plant genera that form ectomycorrhizas ha...
© 2014 British Ecological Society. Summary: The role of novel ecological interactions between mammal...
Artículo de publicación ISILike all obligately ectomycorrhizal plants, pines require ectomycorrhizal...
Belowground biota can deeply influence plant invasion. The presence of proper soil mutualists can ac...
Pine species have become invasive throughout the globe and threaten to replace native biota. The thr...
We asked if exotic Pinus elliotti seedlings can survive and form ectomycorrhizas at higher elevation...
Purpose: Pinaceae (pine family) trees are native to the Northern Hemisphere and their invasion into ...
Aims: Biological invasions have historically been addressed mostly from an aboveground perspective, ...
Exotic non-native Pinus species have been widely planted or become naturalized in many parts of the ...
marily due to the invasion of birch and pine. This encroachment has been researched in depth from a ...
We used molecular genetic methods to test two hypotheses, (i) that host plant specificity among ecto...
Biological invasions are often complex phenomena because many factors influence their outcome. One k...
It has been proposed that co-invasion with ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi is a common mechanism by which...
1. The role of novel ecological interactions between mammals, fungi and plants in invaded ecosystems...
© 2015 by the Ecological Society of America. Biological invasions are a rapidly increasing driver of...
Many ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) are generalists, but most plant genera that form ectomycorrhizas ha...
© 2014 British Ecological Society. Summary: The role of novel ecological interactions between mammal...