Pages that link to "Q56453275"
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The following pages link to Invasive belowground mutualists of woody plants (Q56453275):
Displaying 42 items.
- An ecological and evolutionary perspective on the parallel invasion of two cross-compatible trees (Q26741583) (← links)
- A single ectomycorrhizal fungal species can enable a Pinus invasion (Q28265785) (← links)
- Tree invasions and biosecurity: eco-evolutionary dynamics of hitchhiking fungi (Q30241709) (← links)
- Mycorrhizal status helps explain invasion success of alien plant species (Q30313625) (← links)
- Belowground legacies of Pinus contorta invasion and removal result in multiple mechanisms of invasional meltdown (Q34555634) (← links)
- Introduced tree species released from negative soil biota (Q35124634) (← links)
- Characterisation of seven Inocybe ectomycorrhizal morphotypes from a semiarid woody steppe (Q35786846) (← links)
- Plant-soil interactions promote co-occurrence of three nonnative woody shrubs (Q35787522) (← links)
- Mycorrhizal co-invasion and novel interactions depend on neighborhood context (Q35848532) (← links)
- Pine invasions in treeless environments: dispersal overruns microsite heterogeneity (Q35914273) (← links)
- Impact of alien pines on local arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities-evidence from two continents (Q35983276) (← links)
- Putative linkages between below- and aboveground mutualisms during alien plant invasions (Q36063160) (← links)
- Co-occurring nonnative woody shrubs have additive and non-additive soil legacies (Q36166371) (← links)
- MycoDB, a global database of plant response to mycorrhizal fungi (Q36887329) (← links)
- The structure of legume-rhizobium interaction networks and their response to tree invasions (Q37084184) (← links)
- Revisiting the 'Gadgil effect': do interguild fungal interactions control carbon cycling in forest soils? (Q38586168) (← links)
- Legume-rhizobium symbiotic promiscuity and effectiveness do not affect plant invasiveness (Q38860374) (← links)
- The emerging science of linked plant-fungal invasions (Q39397967) (← links)
- Ectomycorrhizal fungal communities coinvading with Pinaceae host plants in Argentina: Gringos bajo el bosque (Q40950654) (← links)
- Think globally, research locally: emerging opportunities for mycorrhizal research in South America: First international mycorrhizal meeting in South America, 'Mycorrhizal symbiosis in the southern cone of South America', Valdivia, Chile, 6-9 March 2 (Q41927495) (← links)
- Invasive legumes can associate with many mutualists of native legumes, but usually do not. (Q42671335) (← links)
- A pantropically introduced tree is followed by specific ectomycorrhizal symbionts due to pseudo-vertical transmission. (Q53071292) (← links)
- N/P imbalance as a key driver for the invasion of oligotrophic dune systems by a woody legume (Q56341693) (← links)
- Fungi and invasions in South Africa (Q56355668) (← links)
- Towards management of invasive ectomycorrhizal fungi (Q56377186) (← links)
- Differences in interactions of aboveground and belowground herbivores on the invasive plant Alternanthera philoxeroides and native host A. sessilis (Q56377224) (← links)
- Persistence of a soil legacy following removal of a nitrogen-fixing invader (Q56427956) (← links)
- Testing the co-invasion hypothesis: ectomycorrhizal fungal communities on Alnus glutinosa and Salix fragilis in New Zealand (Q56437860) (← links)
- Novel interactions between non-native mammals and fungi facilitate establishment of invasive pines (Q56441513) (← links)
- Tree invasions: patterns, processes, challenges and opportunities (Q56453237) (← links)
- Ecology and management of invasive Pinaceae around the world: progress and challenges (Q56752112) (← links)
- Biological invasions in forest ecosystems (Q56925461) (← links)
- The influence of residence time and geographic extent on the strength of plant-soil feedbacks for naturalised Trifolium (Q56996591) (← links)
- Impacts of invasive biota in forest ecosystems in an aboveground–belowground context (Q57055716) (← links)
- How to Outgrow Your Native Neighbour? Belowground Changes under Native Shrubs at an Early Stage of Invasion (Q58313604) (← links)
- Context dependency, co-introductions, novel mutualisms, and host shifts shaped the ectomycorrhizal fungal communities of the alien tree Eucalyptus globulus (Q64061190) (← links)
- Potential invasive plant expansion in global ecoregions under climate change (Q64064624) (← links)
- A native parasitic plant and soil microorganisms facilitate a native plant co-occurrence with an invasive plant (Q92605379) (← links)
- Below-ground biotic interactions moderated the postglacial range dynamics of trees (Q95537468) (← links)
- Alien ectomycorrhizal plants differ in their ability to interact with co-introduced and native ectomycorrhizal fungi in novel sites (Q96135584) (← links)
- Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi favor invasive Echinops sphaerocephalus when grown in competition with native Inula conyzae (Q102220400) (← links)
- Fungal community structure variability between the root rhizosphere and endosphere in a granite catena system in Kruger National Park, South Africa (Q116855932) (← links)