Multiple ectomycorrhizal fungi (EMF) compete to colonise the roots of a host plant, but it is not known whether their success is under plant or fungal control, or a combination of both. We assessed whether plants control EMF colonisation by preferentially allocating more carbon to more beneficial partners in terms of nitrogen supply or if other factors drive competitive success. We combined stable isotope labelling and RNA-sequencing approaches to characterise nutrient exchange between the plant host Eucalyptus grandis and three Pisolithus isolates when growing alone and when competing either indirectly (with a physical barrier) or directly. Overall, we found that nitrogen provision to the plant does not explain the amount of carbon that an...
Highly diverse plant communities growing on nutrient-impoverished soils are test beds for theories o...
Highly variable phenotypic responses in mycorrhizal plants challenge our functional understanding of...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) form symbiotic connections with host-plant roots, providing nutri...
Forest trees are able to thrive in nutrient-poor soils in part because they obtain growth-limiting n...
Forest trees are able to thrive in nutrient-poor soils in part because they obtain growth-limiting n...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi exchange soil nutrients for carbon from plant hosts. Empirical works su...
Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi are key players in forest carbon (C) sequestration, receiving a substant...
Background. The extent to which ectomycorrhizal fungi mediate primary production, carbon storage, an...
Plant-plant interactions and coexistence can be directly mediated by symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhiza...
Plant-plant interactions and coexistence can be directly mediated by symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhiza...
Although ectomycorrhizal fungi have well-recognized effects on ecological processes ranging from pla...
Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi are integral to boreal and temperate forest ecosystem functioning and nu...
1. Competition strongly influences many species assemblages, but its role in mycorrhizal fungal inte...
Aims: The stress-gradient-hypothesis predicts that interactions among organisms shift from competiti...
The 400 million year old arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) mutualism is a symbiosis that is formed between...
Highly diverse plant communities growing on nutrient-impoverished soils are test beds for theories o...
Highly variable phenotypic responses in mycorrhizal plants challenge our functional understanding of...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) form symbiotic connections with host-plant roots, providing nutri...
Forest trees are able to thrive in nutrient-poor soils in part because they obtain growth-limiting n...
Forest trees are able to thrive in nutrient-poor soils in part because they obtain growth-limiting n...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi exchange soil nutrients for carbon from plant hosts. Empirical works su...
Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi are key players in forest carbon (C) sequestration, receiving a substant...
Background. The extent to which ectomycorrhizal fungi mediate primary production, carbon storage, an...
Plant-plant interactions and coexistence can be directly mediated by symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhiza...
Plant-plant interactions and coexistence can be directly mediated by symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhiza...
Although ectomycorrhizal fungi have well-recognized effects on ecological processes ranging from pla...
Ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungi are integral to boreal and temperate forest ecosystem functioning and nu...
1. Competition strongly influences many species assemblages, but its role in mycorrhizal fungal inte...
Aims: The stress-gradient-hypothesis predicts that interactions among organisms shift from competiti...
The 400 million year old arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) mutualism is a symbiosis that is formed between...
Highly diverse plant communities growing on nutrient-impoverished soils are test beds for theories o...
Highly variable phenotypic responses in mycorrhizal plants challenge our functional understanding of...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) form symbiotic connections with host-plant roots, providing nutri...