Fungal communities associated with plants often decrease in similarity as the distance between sampling sites increases (i.e., they demonstrate distance decay). In the southwestern USA, forests occur in highlands separated from one another by warmer, drier biomes with plant and fungal communities that differ from those at higher elevations. These disjunct forests are broadly similar in climate to one another, offering an opportunity to examine drivers of distance decay in plant-associated fungi across multiple ecologically similar yet geographically disparate landscapes. We examined ectomycorrhizal and foliar endophytic fungi associated with a dominant forest tree (Pinus ponderosa) in forests across ca. 550 km of geographic distance from no...
Climatic and land use changes have significant consequences for the distribution of tree species, b...
Evidence suggests that microbial communities show patterns of spatial scaling which can be driven by...
1. Fungi are both agents of disease and mutualistic partners of plants. Previous studies have tested...
Plant range boundaries are generally considered to reflect abiotic conditions; however, a rise in ne...
Foliar fungal endophytes represent a diverse and species-rich plant microbiome. Their biogeography p...
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Understanding distributions of plant-symbiotic fungi is important for projecti...
Through hundreds of millions of years of association, fungi that live in symbiosis with plants have ...
Distance decay, the general reduction in similarity of community composition with increasing geograp...
AIM: Ectomycorrhizal fungi (ECMF) are partners in a globally distributed tree symbiosis implicated i...
Assembly of fungal communities remains poorly understood in part because of the daunting range of sp...
Aim At continental scales, abiotic factors such as climate are typically used to explain differences...
Successful colonization of empty habitat patches depends both on the capacity of a species to reach ...
Plants and mycorrhizal fungi influence each other’s abundance, diversity and distribution. How other...
Dispersal plays a prominent role in most conceptual models of community assembly. However, direct me...
For my dissertation I focused on two key questions central to fungal diversity: the role ofdispersal...
Climatic and land use changes have significant consequences for the distribution of tree species, b...
Evidence suggests that microbial communities show patterns of spatial scaling which can be driven by...
1. Fungi are both agents of disease and mutualistic partners of plants. Previous studies have tested...
Plant range boundaries are generally considered to reflect abiotic conditions; however, a rise in ne...
Foliar fungal endophytes represent a diverse and species-rich plant microbiome. Their biogeography p...
PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Understanding distributions of plant-symbiotic fungi is important for projecti...
Through hundreds of millions of years of association, fungi that live in symbiosis with plants have ...
Distance decay, the general reduction in similarity of community composition with increasing geograp...
AIM: Ectomycorrhizal fungi (ECMF) are partners in a globally distributed tree symbiosis implicated i...
Assembly of fungal communities remains poorly understood in part because of the daunting range of sp...
Aim At continental scales, abiotic factors such as climate are typically used to explain differences...
Successful colonization of empty habitat patches depends both on the capacity of a species to reach ...
Plants and mycorrhizal fungi influence each other’s abundance, diversity and distribution. How other...
Dispersal plays a prominent role in most conceptual models of community assembly. However, direct me...
For my dissertation I focused on two key questions central to fungal diversity: the role ofdispersal...
Climatic and land use changes have significant consequences for the distribution of tree species, b...
Evidence suggests that microbial communities show patterns of spatial scaling which can be driven by...
1. Fungi are both agents of disease and mutualistic partners of plants. Previous studies have tested...