Plant interactions are as important belowground as aboveground. Belowground plant interactions are however inherently difficult to quantify, as roots of different species are difficult to disentangle. Although for a couple of decades molecular techniques have been successfully applied to quantify root abundance, root identification and quantification in multi-species plant communities remains particularly challenging. Here we present a novel methodology, multi-species Genotyping By Sequencing (msGBS), as a next step to tackle this challenge. First, a multi-species meta-reference database containing thousands of gDNA clusters per species is created from GBS derived High Throughput Sequencing (HTS) reads. Second, GBS derived HTS reads from m...
Plants interact with each other, nutrients, and microbial communities in soils through extensive roo...
Variation in plant species richness has been described using only aboveground vegetation. The specie...
Tree species are typically identified using leaf and bark traits but identifying species by roots is...
Plant interactions are as important belowground as aboveground. Belowground plant interactions are h...
Most work on plant community ecology has been performed aboveground, neglecting the processes that o...
Most work on plant community ecology has been performed above ground, neglecting the processes that ...
The architecture of root systems is an important driver of plant fitness, competition and ecosystem ...
While metabarcoding of plant DNA from their environment is an exciting method that can supplement in...
Premise of the Study—Phylogenetic support has been difficult to evaluate within the green plant tree...
1. Plant diversity has profound effects on primary production. Plant diversity has been shown to cor...
Contains all metadata (excluding raw sequences) of the msGBS: A new high-throughput approach to quan...
Anthropogenic activities are having a deleterious effect on biodiversity. To understand the magnitud...
Item does not contain fulltextContains all metadata (excluding raw sequences) of the msGBS: A new hi...
International audienceGenotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) is a method to discover and genotype simultaneo...
DNA metabarcoding is promising for cost-effective biodiversity monitoring, but reliable diversity es...
Plants interact with each other, nutrients, and microbial communities in soils through extensive roo...
Variation in plant species richness has been described using only aboveground vegetation. The specie...
Tree species are typically identified using leaf and bark traits but identifying species by roots is...
Plant interactions are as important belowground as aboveground. Belowground plant interactions are h...
Most work on plant community ecology has been performed aboveground, neglecting the processes that o...
Most work on plant community ecology has been performed above ground, neglecting the processes that ...
The architecture of root systems is an important driver of plant fitness, competition and ecosystem ...
While metabarcoding of plant DNA from their environment is an exciting method that can supplement in...
Premise of the Study—Phylogenetic support has been difficult to evaluate within the green plant tree...
1. Plant diversity has profound effects on primary production. Plant diversity has been shown to cor...
Contains all metadata (excluding raw sequences) of the msGBS: A new high-throughput approach to quan...
Anthropogenic activities are having a deleterious effect on biodiversity. To understand the magnitud...
Item does not contain fulltextContains all metadata (excluding raw sequences) of the msGBS: A new hi...
International audienceGenotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) is a method to discover and genotype simultaneo...
DNA metabarcoding is promising for cost-effective biodiversity monitoring, but reliable diversity es...
Plants interact with each other, nutrients, and microbial communities in soils through extensive roo...
Variation in plant species richness has been described using only aboveground vegetation. The specie...
Tree species are typically identified using leaf and bark traits but identifying species by roots is...