Plants mediate indirect ‘apparent’ effects between above-ground herbivores and below-ground mutualistic mycorrhizal fungi. The herbivore–plant–mycorrhiza continuum is further complicated because signals produced by plants in response to herbivores can be transmitted to other plants via shared fungal networks below ground. Insect herbivores, such as aphids, probably affect the functioning of mycorrhizal fungi by changing the supply of recent photosynthate from plants to mycorrhizas, whereas there is evidence that mycorrhizas affect aphid fitness by changing plant signalling pathways, rather than only through improved nutrition. New knowledge of the transfer of signals through fungal networks between plant species means we now need a better u...
The majority of plants are involved in symbioses with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and these ...
Ecological interactions are complex networks, but have typically been studied in a pairwise fashion....
Plants interact with mutualists and antagonists both below- and aboveground. However, while we know ...
Plants mediate indirect ‘apparent’ effects between above-ground herbivores and below-ground mutualis...
Interactions between herbivores and their predators are shaped, in part, by plant phenotype. Consequ...
The roots of most land plants are colonised by mycorrhizal fungi that provide mineral nutrients in e...
1. Interactions between herbivores and their predators are shaped, in part, by plant phenotype. Cons...
Plants are exposed to herbivores and symbionts above and belowground. Herbivores aboveground alter p...
The roots of most land plants are colonised by mycorrhizal fungi that provide mineral nutrients in e...
1. Accumulating evidence indicates that plant resistance against above-ground herbivores can be affe...
Plants interact with a variety of other community members that have the potential to indirectly infl...
Over the last two decades strong evidence has emerged that. interactions between .soil microbes, pla...
Aims Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi associate with the majority of terrestrial plants, influenci...
Most plants interact with both arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, which increase nutrient acquisitio...
There is growing interest in managing arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi in agriculture to support pl...
The majority of plants are involved in symbioses with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and these ...
Ecological interactions are complex networks, but have typically been studied in a pairwise fashion....
Plants interact with mutualists and antagonists both below- and aboveground. However, while we know ...
Plants mediate indirect ‘apparent’ effects between above-ground herbivores and below-ground mutualis...
Interactions between herbivores and their predators are shaped, in part, by plant phenotype. Consequ...
The roots of most land plants are colonised by mycorrhizal fungi that provide mineral nutrients in e...
1. Interactions between herbivores and their predators are shaped, in part, by plant phenotype. Cons...
Plants are exposed to herbivores and symbionts above and belowground. Herbivores aboveground alter p...
The roots of most land plants are colonised by mycorrhizal fungi that provide mineral nutrients in e...
1. Accumulating evidence indicates that plant resistance against above-ground herbivores can be affe...
Plants interact with a variety of other community members that have the potential to indirectly infl...
Over the last two decades strong evidence has emerged that. interactions between .soil microbes, pla...
Aims Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi associate with the majority of terrestrial plants, influenci...
Most plants interact with both arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, which increase nutrient acquisitio...
There is growing interest in managing arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi in agriculture to support pl...
The majority of plants are involved in symbioses with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), and these ...
Ecological interactions are complex networks, but have typically been studied in a pairwise fashion....
Plants interact with mutualists and antagonists both below- and aboveground. However, while we know ...