157-163 | Polygalacturonase activity and location in arbuscular mycorrhizal roots of Allium porrum L. | Renato Peretto, Paola Bonfante, Vittorio Bettini, Francesco Favaron and Paolo Alghisi |
165-173 | Inoculation and field testing of Sitka spruce and Douglas fir with ectomycorrhizal fungi in the United Kingdom | R. M. Jackson, S. Luff, C. Walker and C. McEvoy |
175-180 | Ectomycorrhizae of Lactarius lignyotus on Norway spruce, characterized by anatomical and molecular tools | Hojka Kraigher, Reinhard Agerer and Branka Javornik |
181-187 | Heavy metal tolerance by ectomycorrhizal fungi and metal amelioration by Pisolithus tinctorius | Paul C. F. Tam |
189-192 | The effect of polyamines on endomycorrhizal infection of wild-type Pisum sativum, cv. Frisson (nod+myc+) and two mutants (nod− myc+ and nod−myc−) | N. El Ghachtouli, M. Paynot, D. Morandi, J. Martin-Tanguy and S. Gianinazzi |
193-200 | Ectomycorrhizal fungi of Pinus pinaster | Joan Pera and Isabel F. Alvarez |
201-203 | Quantification and correlation of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal propagules with soil properties of some mollisols of northern India | V. P. Rathore and H. P. Singh |
205-211 | Acid phosphatase activity in Pisolithus arrhizus mycelium treated with cadmium dust | K. Turnau and J. Dexheimer |
213-217 | Responses of some tropical and subtropical cultures to endomycorrhizal fungi | M. C. Jaizme-Vega and R. Azcón |
219-221 | Field response of mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal Medicago sativa var. local in the F1 generation | Deepti Srivastava and K. G. Mukerji |
223-228 | Effect of phosphorus source and rate of application on VAM fungal infection and growth of maize (Zea mays L.) | A. E. Asmah |
229-231 | Mass production of Glomus mosseae spores | Ahmad M. Al-Raddad |
233-236 | Interaction of Glomus mosseae and Paecilomyces lilacinus on Meloidogyne javanica of tomato | Ahmad M. Al-Raddad |
157-163 | Polygalacturonase activity and location in arbuscular mycorrhizal roots of Allium porrum L. | Renato Peretto, Paola Bonfante, Vittorio Bettini, Francesco Favaron and Paolo Alghisi |
165-173 | Inoculation and field testing of Sitka spruce and Douglas fir with ectomycorrhizal fungi in the United Kingdom | R. M. Jackson, S. Luff, C. Walker and C. McEvoy |
175-180 | Ectomycorrhizae of Lactarius lignyotus on Norway spruce, characterized by anatomical and molecular tools | Hojka Kraigher, Reinhard Agerer and Branka Javornik |
181-187 | Heavy metal tolerance by ectomycorrhizal fungi and metal amelioration by Pisolithus tinctorius | Paul C. F. Tam |
189-192 | The effect of polyamines on endomycorrhizal infection of wild-type Pisum sativum, cv. Frisson (nod+myc+) and two mutants (nod− myc+ and nod−myc−) | N. El Ghachtouli, M. Paynot, D. Morandi, J. Martin-Tanguy and S. Gianinazzi |
193-200 | Ectomycorrhizal fungi of Pinus pinaster | Joan Pera and Isabel F. Alvarez |
201-203 | Quantification and correlation of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal propagules with soil properties of some mollisols of northern India | V. P. Rathore and H. P. Singh |
205-211 | Acid phosphatase activity in Pisolithus arrhizus mycelium treated with cadmium dust | K. Turnau and J. Dexheimer |
213-217 | Responses of some tropical and subtropical cultures to endomycorrhizal fungi | M. C. Jaizme-Vega and R. Azcón |
219-221 | Field response of mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal Medicago sativa var. local in the F1 generation | Deepti Srivastava and K. G. Mukerji |
223-228 | Effect of phosphorus source and rate of application on VAM fungal infection and growth of maize (Zea mays L.) | A. E. Asmah |
229-231 | Mass production of Glomus mosseae spores | Ahmad M. Al-Raddad |
233-236 | Interaction of Glomus mosseae and Paecilomyces lilacinus on Meloidogyne javanica of tomato | Ahmad M. Al-Raddad |
299 | Editorial | Vivienne Gianinazzi-Pearson and Michael F. Allen |
301-311 | Extramatrical structures of hydrophobic and hydrophilic ectomycorrhizal fungi | Torgny Unestam and Yu-Ping Sun |
313-319 | A tripartite culture system for endomycorrhizal inoculation of micropropagated strawberry plantlets in vitro | Abdelmalek Elmeskaoui, Jean-Pierre Damont, Marie-Josée Poulin, Yves Piché and Yves Desjardins |
321-327 | Effects of a vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus and other soil microorganisms on growth, mineral nutrient acquisition and root exudation of soil-grown maize plants | H. A. Azaizeh, H. Marschner, V. Römheld and L. Wittenmayer |
329-336 | Occurrence of some Glomales in Finland | M. Vestberg |
337-345 | Mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal host growth in response to changes in pH and P concentration in a manganiferous oxisol | M. Soedarjo and M. Habte |
347-356 | Nitrogen and phosphorus requirements for raising mycorrhizal seedlings of Leucaena leucocephala in containers | N. A. Onguene and M. Habte |
357-370 | Ectomycorrhizae formed in vitro by quaking aspen: including Inocybe lacera and Amanita pantherina | Cathy L. Cripps and O. K. Miller |
371-379 | Population structure and mycelial phenotypic variability of the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete Laccaria bicolor (Maire) Orton | Paul Y. Bastide, Bradley R. Kropp and Yves Piché |
381-386 | Mycorrhizal plants and fungi in the fog-free Pacific coastal desert of Chile | S. S. Dhillion, P. E. Vidiella, L. E. Aquilera, C. F. Friese and E. Leon, et al. |
1-5 | Saprobic potential of Tricholoma matsutake: growth over pine bark treated with surfactants | Lu-Min Vaario, Alexis Guerin-Laguette, Norihisa Matsushita, Kazuo Suzuki and Frédéric Lapeyrie |
7-12 | Interactions between indigenous arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and Aphanomyces euteiches in field-grown pea | Lars Bødker, Rasmus Kjøller, Kristian Kristensen and Søren Rosendahl |
13-17 | Importance of the ectomycorrhizal network for seedling survival and ectomycorrhiza formation in rain forests of south Cameroon | N. Onguene and T. Kuyper |
19-27 | SCAR markers to detect mycorrhizas of an American Laccaria bicolor strain inoculated in European Douglas-fir plantations | Jean Weber, Jesús Díez, Marc-André Selosse, Denis Tagu and François Tacon |
29-36 | Seasonality of root fungal colonization in low-alpine herbs | A. Ruotsalainen, H. Väre and M. Vestberg |
37-42 | Breaking dormancy in spores of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices: a critical cold-storage period | Christine Juge, Julie Samson, Claudia Bastien, Horst Vierheilig and Andrew Coughlan, et al. |
43-49 | Occurrence of ectomycorrhizal fungi on the forefront of retreating Lyman Glacier (Washington, USA) in relation to time since deglaciation | Ari Jumpponen, James M. Trappe and Efren Cázares |
51 | ICOM 3: a landmark in mycorrhiza research |
52 | The 7th International Mycological Congress in Oslo, Norway, 11-17/08/2002 |
53 | Mycorrhiza - diversity and impacts |
55-59 | Effect of phenanthrene and Rhodotorula glutinis on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus colonization of maize roots | M. Gaspar, M. Cabello, M. Cazau and R. Pollero |
61-66 | Ectomycorrhizae between Alnus acuminata H.B.K. and Naucoria escharoides (Fr.:Fr.) Kummer from Argentina | Alejandra Becerra, Graciela Daniele, Laura Domínguez, Eduardo Nouhra and Tom Horton |
67-74 | Methods to estimate the proportion of plant and fungal RNA in an arbuscular mycorrhiza | Ignacio E. Maldonado-Mendoza, Gary R. Dewbre, Marianne L. van Buuren, Wayne K. Versaw and Maria J. Harrison |
75-82 | Monotropa uniflora: morphological and molecular assessment of mycorrhizae retrieved from sites in the Sub-Boreal Spruce biogeoclimatic zone in central British Columbia | B. Young, H. Massicotte, L. Tackaberry, Q. Baldwin and K. Egger |
83-88 | Spatiotemporal transfer of carbon-14-labelled photosynthate from ectomycorrhizal Pinus densiflora seedlings to extraradical mycelia | Bingyun Wu, Kazuhide Nara and Taizo Hogetsu |
89-92 | Co-occurrence of three fungal root symbionts in Gaultheria poeppiggi DC in Central Argentina | Carlos Urcelay |
93-96 | Phosphorus-32 absorption and translocation to host plants by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi at low root-zone temperature | B. Wang, D. Funakoshi, Y. Dalpé and C. Hamel |
97-102 | Influence of an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus on the interaction of a binucleate Rhizoctonia species with Myc+ and Myc- pea roots | Dominique Morandi, Armelle Gollotte and Pierre Camporota |
103-104 | The 6th Symposium of the International Society of Root Research: a mycorrhizast's point of view |
163-167 | Increased spore production by Glomus intraradices in the split-plate monoxenic culture system by repeated harvest, gel replacement, and resupply of glucose to the mycorrhiza | David D. Douds |
169-174 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal relations of mangrove plant community at the Ganges river estuary in India | Anjan Sengupta and Subhendu Chaudhuri |
175-180 | Saprobic characteristics of three fungal taxa from ericalean roots and their association with the roots of Rhododendron groenlandicum and Picea mariana in culture | M. Piercey, M. Thormann and R. Currah |
181-184 | Colonization of roots by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi using different sources of inoculum | John N. Klironomos and Miranda M. Hart |
185-190 | Improved tolerance of maize plants to salt stress by arbuscular mycorrhiza is related to higher accumulation of soluble sugars in roots | G. Feng, F. Zhang, X. Li, C. Tian and C. Tang, et al. |
191-198 | Mycorrhiza-induced differential response to a yellows disease in tomato | Guido Lingua, Giovanni D'Agostino, Nadia Massa, Michele Antosiano and Graziella Berta |
199-211 | The arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus geosporum in European saline, sodic and gypsum soils | Melanie Landwehr, Ulrich Hildebrandt, Petra Wilde, Kerstin Nawrath and Tibor Tóth, et al. |
213-217 | Arbuscular mycorrhizas in cycads of southern India | T. Muthukumar and K. Udaiyan |
219-222 | A mycorrhiza-responsive protein in wheat roots | T. Fester, M. Kiess and D. Strack |
223-224 | Systematics and Evolution |
59-68 | Uptake and transfer of nutrients in ectomycorrhizal associations: interactions between photosynthesis and phosphate nutrition | H. Bücking and W. Heyser |
69-75 | Soil persistence and biodiversity of ericoid mycorrhizal fungi in the absence of the host plant in a Mediterranean ecosystem | Roberta Bergero, Mariangela Girlanda, Federica Bello, Anna Luppi and Silvia Perotto |
77-83 | Mycorrhizal perennials of the "matorral xerófilo" and the "selva baja caducifolia" communities in the semiarid Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley, Mexico | Sara Camargo-Ricalde, Shivcharn S. Dhillion and Carolina Jiménez-González |
85-91 | A mycorrhiza helper bacterium enhances ectomycorrhizal and endomycorrhizal symbiosis of Australian Acacia species | R. Duponnois and C. Plenchette |
93-100 | Phosphorus efficiencies and responses of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi grown in highly calcareous soil | Yong-Guan Zhu, Andrew F. Smith and Sally E. Smith |
101-105 | A PCR/RFLP technique to characterize fungal species in Eucalyptus grandis Hill ex. Maiden ectomycorrhizas | Gabriela Malvárez and Vetúria L. Oliveira |
107-115 | Two genetically related strains of Tuber borchii produce Tilia mycorrhizas with different morphological traits | D. Sisti, G. Giomaro, M. Cecchini, A. Faccio and M. Novero, et al. |
117-121 | Detoxification of ferulic acid by ectomycorrhizal fungi | B. Münzenberger, E. Hammer, V. Wray, F. Schauer and J Schmidt, et al. |
159-165 | Quantitative detection of agar-cultivated and rhizotron-grown Piloderma croceum Erikss. & Hjortst. by ITS1-based fluorescent PCR | Roland Schubert, Stefan Raidl, Rita Funk, Günther Bahnweg and Gerhard Müller-Starck, et al. |
167-170 | Systemic inhibition of arbuscular mycorrhiza development by root exudates of cucumber plants colonized by Glomus mosseae | H. Vierheilig, S. Lerat and Y. Piché |
171-172 | Good-Enough RFLP Matcher (GERM) program | Ian A. Dickie, Peter G. Avis, David J. McLaughlin and Peter B. Reich |
173-176 | Influence of water stress on biomass production by isolates of an ericoid mycorrhizal endophyte of Woollsia pungens and Epacris microphylla (Ericaceae) | David M. Chen, Kevin Khalili and John W. G. Cairney |
123-127 | Selection of appropriate host plants used in trap culture of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | Runjin Liu and Fayuan Wang |
129-136 | Endemic Mimosa species can serve as mycorrhizal "resource islands" within semiarid communities of the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley, Mexico | Sara Lucía Camargo-Ricalde and Shivcharn S. Dhillion |
137-142 | Differential RNA accumulation of two ß-tubulin genes in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | D. Rhody, M. Stommel, C. Roeder, P. Mann and P. Franken |
143-149 | Founder effect in a young Leccinum duriusculum (Schultzer) Singer population | M.-A. Selosse |
151-157 | Metal-free cultivation of Glomus sp. BEG 140 isolated from Mn-contaminated soil reduces tolerance to Mn | R. Malcová, J. Rydlová and M. Vosátka |
1-10 | Proteomics as a tool to monitor plant-microbe endosymbioses in the rhizosphere | G. Bestel-Corre, E. Dumas-Gaudot and S. Gianinazzi |
11-18 | Differential responses of three fungal species to environmental factors and their role in the mycorrhization of Pinus radiata D. Don | MirenK. Duñabeitia, Susana Hormilla, JoseI. Garcia-Plazaola, Kepa Txarterina and Unai Arteche, et al. |
19-23 | The population of the hypogeous fungus Tuber aestivum syn. T. uncinatum on the island of Gotland | Christina Wedén, Eric Danell, FranciscoJ. Camacho and Anders Backlund |
25-30 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi associated with common pteridophytes in Dujiangyan, southwest China | Ying Zhang, Liang-Dong Guo and Run-Jin Liu |
31-36 | Responses of mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal Erica cinerea and Vaccinium macrocarpon to Glomus mosseae | Kenneth Byrne and DerekT. Mitchell |
37-45 | Development, persistence and regeneration of foraging ectomycorrhizal mycelial systems in soil microcosms | DamianP. Donnelly, Lynne Boddy and JonathanR. Leake |
47-54 | Effects of mycorrhizal colonisation on Thymus polytrichus from heavy-metal-contaminated sites in northern England | L. Whitfield, A.J. Richards and D.L. Rimmer |
55-62 | Relationships between soil heavy metal concentration and mycorrhizal colonisation in Thymus polytrichus in northern England | L. Whitfield, A.J. Richards and D.L. Rimmer |
63-64 | Mycorrhizal symbionts of Populus to be sequenced by the United States Department of Energy’s Joint Genome Institute | P. Lammers, G.A. Tuskan, S.P. DiFazio, G.K. Podila and F. Martin |
145-163 | A history of research on arbuscular mycorrhiza | RogerT. Koide and Barbara Mosse |
165-170 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal propagules in a salt marsh | Luís M. Carvalho, Patrícia M. Correia and M. Amélia Martins-Loução |
171-175 | Evaluation of mycelial inocula of edible Lactarius species for the production of Pinus pinaster and P. sylvestris mycorrhizal seedlings under greenhouse conditions | Javier Parladé, Joan Pera and Jordi Luque |
177-184 | Functional aspects of root architecture and mycorrhizal inoculation with respect to nutrient uptake capacity | Cristina Cruz, James J. Green, Christine A. Watson, Frederick Wilson and Maria Amélia Martins-Loução |
185-192 | Impact of two fluorescent pseudomonads and an arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus on tomato plant growth, root architecture and P acquisition | Elisa Gamalero, Antonio Trotta, Nadia Massa, Andrea Copetta and Maria Giovanna Martinotti, et al. |
193-202 | Abundance, diversity, and vitality of mycorrhizae of Scots pine ( Pinus sylvestris L.) in lignite recultivation sites | B. Münzenberger, J. Golldack, A. Ullrich, B. Schmincke and R. F. Hüttl |
203-207 | Comparison of 233U and 33P uptake and translocation by the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices in root organ culture conditions | Gervais Rufyikiri, Stéphane Declerck and Yves Thiry |
209-212 | Boron uptake by ectomycorrhizas of silver birch | T. Lehto, A. Lavola, E. Kallio and P.J. Aphalo |
213-219 | Spore ontogeny of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Archaeospora trappei (Ames & Linderman) Morton & Redecker ( Archaeosporaceae) | KalideenM. Hafeel |
221-228 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi colonize decomposing leaves of Myrica parvifolia, M. pubescens and Paepalanthus sp. | Catalina Aristizábal, Emma Lucía Rivera and David P. Janos |
229-234 | Improvement by soil yeasts of arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis of soybean ( Glycine max) colonized by Glomus mosseae | I. Sampedro, E. Aranda, J. M. Scervino, S. Fracchia and I. García-Romera, et al. |
235-240 | Genetic structure of a population of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Russula vinosa in subtropical woodlands in southwest China | Yu Liang, Liang-dong Guo and Ke-ping Ma |
241-244 | Interactive effects of temperature and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on growth, P uptake and root respiration of Capsicum annuum L. | Chris A. Martin and Jean C. Stutz |
245-251 | Utilisation of carbon substrates by multiple genotypes of ericoid mycorrhizal fungal endophytes from eastern Australian Ericaceae | David J. Midgley, Susan M. Chambers and John W. G. Cairney |
253-262 | Expression profiling of up-regulated plant and fungal genes in early and late stages of Medicago truncatula-Glomus mosseae interactions | L. Brechenmacher, S. Weidmann, D. van Tuinen, O. Chatagnier and S. Gianinazzi, et al. |
263-269 | Field response of wheat to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and drought stress | Ghazi Al-Karaki, B. McMichael and John Zak |
271-275 | Rapid and reliable DNA extraction techniques from trypan-blue-stained mycorrhizal roots: comparison of two methods | Satoshi Ishii and Thomas E. Loynachan |
277-281 | Red list plants: colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and dark septate endophytes | B. Fuchs and K. Haselwandter |
339-346 | Growth and survival of seedlings of native plants in an impoverished and highly disturbed soil following inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | G. S. Pattinson, K. A. Hammill, B. G. Sutton and P. A. McGee |
347-354 | Uptake of cadmium from an experimentally contaminated calcareous soil by arbuscular mycorrhizal maize ( Zea maysL.) | B. D. Chen, Y. Liu, H. Shen, X. L. Li and P. Christie |
355-362 | Indigenous and introduced arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi contribute to plant growth in two agricultural soils from south-western Australia | C. Gazey, L. K. Abbott and A. D. Robson |
363-373 | Defoliation effects on the community structure of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi based on 18S rDNA sequences | Katsuharu Saito, Yoshihisa Suyama, Shusuke Sato and Kazuo Sugawara |
375-381 | Species richness and seasonal abundance of ectomycorrhizal fungi in plantations of Eucalyptus dunnii and Pinus taeda in southern Brazil | Admir J. Giachini, Luiz A. B. Souza and Vetúria L. Oliveira |
383-389 | Ectomycorrhizal fungal community structure across a bog-forest ecotone in southeastern Alaska | Nina Wurzburger, Anthony S. Hartshorn and Ronald L. Hendrick |
391-395 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization of the dominant plant species in primary successional volcanic deserts on the Southeast slope of Mount Fuji | Bingyun Wu, Katsunori Isobe and Ryuichi Ishii |
397-400 | The mycorrhizal fungus Tricholoma matsutake stimulates Pinus densiflora seedling growth in vitro | Alexis Guerin-Laguette, Katsumi Shindo, Norihisa Matsushita, Kazuo Suzuki and Frédéric Lapeyrie |
401-405 | Behaviour of the hyphae of Laccaria laccata in the presence of Trichoderma harzianum in vitro | Marcin Zadworny, Antoni Werner and Krystyna Idzikowska |
1-6 | Diversity of an ectomycorrhizal fungal community studied by a root tip and total soil DNA approach | Renske Landeweert, Paula Leeflang, Eric Smit and Thom Kuyper |
7-15 | Ectomycorrhizas of Cortinarius helodes and Gyrodon monticola with Alnus acuminata from Argentina | Alejandra Becerra, Eduardo Nouhra, Graciela Daniele, Laura Domínguez and Donaraye McKay |
17-23 | Organic acids and water-soluble phenolics produced by Paxillus sp. 60/92 together show antifungal activity against Pythium vexans under acidic culture conditions | Keiko Yamaji, Hiroshi Ishimoto, Noriyuki Usui and Shigeta Mori |
25-31 | Mycelial production, spread and root colonisation by the ectomycorrhizal fungi Hebeloma crustuliniforme and Paxillus involutus under elevated atmospheric CO 2 | Petra M. A. Fransson, Andy F. S. Taylor and Roger D. Finlay |
33-46 | Studies on the diversity of the distinct phylogenetic lineage encompassing Glomus claroideum and Glomus etunicatum | Alia Rodriguez, Justin P. Clapp, Louisa Robinson and John C. Dodd |
47-53 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in a semiarid copper mining area in Brazil | Gladstone Alves da Silva, Sandra Farto Botelho Trufem, Orivaldo José Saggin Júnior and Leonor Costa Maia |
55-59 | Morphological and molecular characterization of selected Ramaria mycorrhizae | Eduardo R. Nouhra, Thomas R. Horton, Efren Cazares and Michael Castellano |
61-64 | Formation of structures resembling ericoid mycorrhizas by the root endophytic fungus Heteroconium chaetospira within roots of Rhododendron obtusum var. kaempferi | Fumiaki Usuki and Kazuhiko Narisawa |
65-70 | Role of nutrient level and defoliation on symbiotic function: experimental evidence by tracing 14C/ 15N exchange in mycorrhizal birch seedlings | Minna-Maarit Kytöviita |
71 | Referee Acknowledgement 2004 |
149-158 | Mycorrhizal inoculum potentials of pure reclamation materials and revegetated tailing sands from the Canadian oil sand industry | G. Bois, Y. Piché, M. Y. P. Fung and D. P. Khasa |
159-165 | Mycorrhizal C costs and nutritional benefits in developing grapevines | P. E. Mortimer, E. Archer and A. J. Valentine |
167-177 | Intraspecific variation in use of different organic nitrogen sources by the ectomycorrhizal fungus Hebeloma cylindrosporum | Alice Guidot, Marie-Christine Verner, Jean-Claude Debaud and Roland Marmeisse |
179-186 | Highly polymorphic DNA markers to specify strains of the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete Tricholoma matsutake based on σmarY1, the long terminal repeat of gypsy-type retroelement marY1 | Hitoshi Murata, Katsuhiko Babasaki and Akiyoshi Yamada |
187-192 | Influence of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus mosseae on uptake of arsenate by the As hyperaccumulator fern Pteris vittata L. | Y. Liu, Y. G. Zhu, B. D. Chen, P. Christie and X. L. Li |
193-201 | Variation in aluminum resistance among arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | C. N. Kelly, J. B. Morton and J. R. Cumming |
203-216 | Plant growth, phosphorus nutrition, and root morphological responses to arbuscular mycorrhizas, phosphorus fertilization, and intraspecific density | M. S. Schroeder and D. P. Janos |
217-224 | Response to cadmium of Daucus carota hairy roots dual cultures with Glomus intraradices or Gigaspora margarita | Martina Janoušková and Miroslav Vosátka |
225-230 | Influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and kinetin on the response of mungbean plants to irrigation with seawater | G. H. Rabie |
231-234 | Influence of pH on copper and zinc sensitivity of ericoid mycobionts in vitro | Brian R. Gibson and Derek T. Mitchell |
235-245 | Year-round monitoring of diversity and potential metabolic activity of the ectomycorrhizal community in a beech (Fagus silvatica) forest subjected to two thinning regimes | Marc Buée, Dominique Vairelles and Jean Garbaye |
247-258 | Morphological-anatomical characterization and molecular identification of Tomentella stuposa ectomycorrhizae and related anatomotypes | Erzsébet Jakucs, G. M. Kovács, R. Agerer, C. Romsics and Z. Erős-Honti |
259-266 | Chemical alteration of the rhizosphere of the mycorrhizal-colonized wheat root | Munir J. Mohammad, W. L. Pan and A. C. Kennedy |
267-275 | On the nutritional dependence of certain trees on root symbiosis with belowground fungi (an English translation of A.B. Frank’s classic paper of 1885) | B. Frank |
277-281 | A.B. Frank and mycorrhizae: the challenge to evolutionary and ecologic theory | James M. Trappe |
283-289 | Characterisation of new symbiotic Medicago truncatula (Gaertn.) mutants, and phenotypic or genotypic complementary information on previously described mutants | Dominique Morandi, Emilce Prado, Muriel Sagan and Gérard Duc |
291-299 | Seasonal variation of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in temperate grasslands along a wide hydrologic gradient | Viviana Escudero and Rodolfo Mendoza |
301-305 | Successful inoculation of mature pine with Tricholoma matsutake | Alexis Guerin-Laguette, Norihisa Matsushita, Frédéric Lapeyrie, Katsumi Shindo and Kazuo Suzuki |
307-312 | Nutrient amounts of ectomycorrhizae analysed by EDX using ESEM and ICP | Michael D. Rumberger, Peter Lentzsch, Babette Münzenberger and Reinhard F. Hüttl |
1-9 | Arbuscular mycorrhizas in coastal sand dunes of the Paraguaná Peninsula, Venezuela | C. Alarcón and G. Cuenca |
11-17 | Contrasting responses to ectomycorrhizal inoculation in seedlings of six tropical African tree species | A. G. Diédhiou, O. Guèye, M. Diabaté, Y. Prin and R. Duponnois, et al. |
19-22 | Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of the ectomycorrhizal symbiont Laccaria bicolor S238N | Minna Kemppainen, Ariana Circosta, Denis Tagu, Francis Martin and Alejandro G. Pardo |
23-31 | Studies on the diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and the efficacy of two native isolates in a highly alkaline anthropogenic sediment | R. S. Oliveira, M. Vosátka, J. C. Dodd and P. M. L. Castro |
33-41 | Fungal communities in mycorrhizal roots of conifer seedlings in forest nurseries under different cultivation systems, assessed by morphotyping, direct sequencing and mycelial isolation | Audrius Menkis, Rimvydas Vasiliauskas, Andrew F. S. Taylor, Jan Stenlid and Roger Finlay |
43-50 | Influence of three species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on the persistence of aromatic hydrocarbons in contaminated substrates | Andrea Volante, Guido Lingua, Patrizia Cesaro, Andrea Cresta and Manuela Puppo, et al. |
51-60 | Molecular changes in Pisum sativum L. roots during arbuscular mycorrhiza buffering of cadmium stress | Facundo Rivera-Becerril, Diederik van Tuinen, Fabrice Martin-Laurent, Ashraf Metwally and Karl-Josef Dietz, et al. |
61-66 | Glomus intraradices67-72 | Oribatid mite (Acari, Oribatida) feeding on ectomycorrhizal fungi | Katja Schneider, Carsten Renker and Mark Maraun |
|
73-79 | Soil modification by different tree species influences the extent of seedling ectomycorrhizal infection | I. A. Dickie, J. Oleksyn, P. B. Reich, P. Karolewski and R. Zytkowiak, et al. |
81-87 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi associated with the Meliaceae on Hainan island, China | Z. Y. Shi, Y. L. Chen, G. Feng, R. J. Liu and P. Christie, et al. |
89-98 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in the tree seedlings of two Australian rain forests: occurrence, colonization, and relationships with plant performance | Catherine A. Gehring and Joseph H. Connell |
99-109 | Growth, compatible solute and salt accumulation of five mycorrhizal fungal species grown over a range of NaCl concentrations | G. Bois, A. Bertrand, Y. Piché, M. Fung and D. P. Khasa |
111-116 | Ectomycorrhizal symbiosis in vitro between Tricholoma matsutake and Pinus densiflora seedlings that resembles naturally occurring ‘shiro’ | Akiyoshi Yamada, Ken Maeda, Hisayasu Kobayashi and Hitoshi Murata |
117-124 | Drought effects on fine-root and ectomycorrhizal-root biomass in managed Pinus oaxacana Mirov stands in Oaxaca, Mexico | María Valdés, Heidi Asbjornsen, Martín Gómez-Cárdenas, Margarita Juárez and Kristiina A. Vogt |
125-132 | Displacement of an herbaceous plant species community by mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal Gmelina arborea, an exotic tree, grown in a microcosm experiment | Arsene Sanon, Pascal Martin, Jean Thioulouse, Christian Plenchette and Rodolphe Spichiger, et al. |
133-136 | Effect of carbon and nitrogen sources, pH and temperature on in vitro culture of several isolates of Amanita caesarea (Scop.:Fr.) Pers. | A. Daza, J. L. Manjón, M. Camacho, L. Romero de la Osa and A. Aguilar, et al. |
137-142 | In situ and in vitro colonization of Cathaya argyrophylla (Pinaceae) by ectomycorrhizal fungi | Lu-Min Vaario, Shu-Tang Xing, Zong-Qiang Xie, Zhi-Ming Lun and Xue Sun, et al. |
143-148 | Spatial distribution of ectomycorrhizal Basidiomycete Russula subsect. Foetentinae populations in a primary dipterocarp rainforest | Taiana Riviere, K. Natarajan and Bernard Dreyfus |
149-150 | In memoriam Hannes Schüepp 1931–2006 | K. Haselwandter |
151-157 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi associated with sedges on the Tibetan plateau | J. P. Gai, X. B. Cai, G. Feng, P. Christie and X. L. Li |
159-166 | Organic and mineral fertilization, respectively, increase and decrease the development of external mycelium of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in a long-term field experiment | M. Gryndler, J. Larsen, H. Hršelová, V. Řezáčová and H. Gryndlerová, et al. |
167-173 | Effect of two AMF life strategies on the tripartite symbiosis with Bradyrhizobium japonicum and soybean | Pedro M. Antunes, Deanna Deaville and Michael J. Goss |
175-182 | Utilisation of carbon substrates by orchid and ericoid mycorrhizal fungi from Australian dry sclerophyll forests | David J. Midgley, Lyndon A. Jordan, Jennifer A. Saleeba and Peter A. McGee |
183-189 | Phylogenetic analysis of Glomeromycota by partial LSU rDNA sequences | Gladstone Alves da Silva, Erica Lumini, Leonor Costa Maia, Paola Bonfante and Valeria Bianciotto |
191-196 | A preliminary survey of the arbuscular mycorrhizal status of grassland plants in southern Tibet | J. P. Gai, G. Feng, X. B. Cai, P. Christie and X. L. Li |
197-206 | Vertical distribution of an ectomycorrhizal community in upper soil horizons of a young Norway spruce (Picea abies [L.] Karst.) stand of the Bavarian Limestone Alps | Roland Baier, Jan Ingenhaag, Helmut Blaschke, Axel Göttlein and Reinhard Agerer |
207-212 | Biodegradation of phenanthrene, spatial distribution of bacterial populations and dioxygenase expression in the mycorrhizosphere of Lolium perenne inoculated with Glomus mosseae | S. C. Corgié, F. Fons, T. Beguiristain and C. Leyval |
213-217 | Limited transfer of nitrogen between wood decomposing and ectomycorrhizal mycelia when studied in the field | Håkan Wallander, Björn D. Lindahl and Lars Ola Nilsson |
219-223 | Differential expression of two class III chitinases in two types of roots of Quercus robur during pre-mycorrhizal interactions with Piloderma croceum | Patrick Frettinger, Sylvie Herrmann, Frédéric Lapeyrie, Ralf Oelmüller and François Buscot |
225-226 | S. Declerck, D.G. Strullu and J.A. Fortin (eds) (2005) In Vitro culture of mycorrhizas
227 | Fifth International Conference on Mycorrhiza, 2006, Granada, Spain |
|
259-270 | Using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) to identify mycorrhizal fungi: a methods review | I. A. Dickie and R. G. FitzJohn |
271-278 | Spatial structure and diversity of woody plants and ectomycorrhizal fungus sporocarps in a natural subtropical forest | Yu Liang, Liang-Dong Guo, Xiao-Jun Du and Ke-Ping Ma |
279-290 | Ectomycorrhiza communities of red oak (Quercus rubra L.) of different age in the Lusatian lignite mining district, East Germany | S. Gebhardt, K. Neubert, J. Wöllecke, B. Münzenberger and R. F. Hüttl |
291-297 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi can induce the production of phytochemicals in sweet basil irrespective of phosphorus nutrition | J. -P. Toussaint, F. A. Smith and S. E. Smith |
299-309 | Nitrogen decreases and precipitation increases ectomycorrhizal extramatrical mycelia production in a longleaf pine forest | Stephanie E. Sims, Joseph J. Hendricks, Robert J. Mitchell, Kevin A. Kuehn and Stephen D. Pecot |
311-318 | Position of the reduced mycorrhizal colonisation (Rmc) locus on the tomato genome map | Nicholas J. Larkan, Sally E. Smith and Susan J. Barker |
319-325 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal structure and fungi associated with mosses | Ying Zhang and Liang-Dong Guo |
327-335 | GintMT1 encodes a functional metallothionein in Glomus intraradices that responds to oxidative stress | M. González-Guerrero, C. Cano, C. Azcón-Aguilar and N. Ferrol |
337-348 | Afforestation of abandoned farmland with conifer seedlings inoculated with three ectomycorrhizal fungi—impact on plant performance and ectomycorrhizal community | A. Menkis, R. Vasiliauskas, A. F. S. Taylor, J. Stenlid and R. Finlay |
349-353 | Investigating physiological changes in the aerial parts of AM plants: what do we know and where should we be heading? | J.-P. Toussaint |
355-373 | Ectomycorrhizal fungi associated with ponderosa pine and Douglas-fir: a comparison of species richness in native western North American forests and Patagonian plantations from Argentina | C. Barroetaveña, E. Cázares and M. Rajchenberg |
375-393 | Structural differences in arbuscular mycorrhizal symbioses: more than 100 years after Gallaud, where next? | S. Dickson, F. A. Smith and S. E. Smith |
395-403 | Ultrastructure of spore development in Scutellospora heterogama | Peter Jeffries, Louisa Robinson-Boyer, Paul Rice, Ray J. Newsam and John C. Dodd |
405-414 | Genetic structure of Tuber mesentericum Vitt. based on polymorphisms at the ribosomal DNA ITS | Maria Sica, Luciano Gaudio and Serena Aceto |
415-428 | Genetic diversity of ectomycorrhizal Basidiomycetes from African and Indian tropical rain forests | Taiana Riviere, Abdallah G. Diedhiou, Moussa Diabate, G. Senthilarasu and K. Natarajan, et al. |
429-437 | Assessing diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in a local community: role of sampling effort and spatial heterogeneity | Sean Whitcomb and Jean C. Stutz |
439-447 | Water transfer via ectomycorrhizal fungal hyphae to conifer seedlings | Agneta H. Plamboeck, Todd E. Dawson, Louise M. Egerton-Warburton, Malcolm North and Thomas D. Bruns, et al. |
449-460 | Exogenous systemin has a contrasting effect on disease resistance in mycorrhizal tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) plants infected with necrotrophic or hemibiotrophic pathogens | Blanca de la Noval, Eduardo Pérez, Benedicto Martínez, Ondina León and Norma Martínez-Gallardo, et al. |
461-467 | Ectomycorrhizal colonization of naturally regenerating Pinus sylvestris L. seedlings growing in different micro-habitats in boreal forest | Michał Iwański and Maria Rudawska |
469-474 | Effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization and two levels of compost supply on nutrient uptake and flowering of pelargonium plants | Henrike Perner, Dietmar Schwarz, Christian Bruns, Paul Mäder and Eckhard George |
475-486 | Further advances in orchid mycorrhizal research | John D. W. Dearnaley |
487-494 | Fluorescent in situ RT-PCR to visualise the expression of a phosphate transporter gene from an ectomycorrhizal fungus | Ingrid M. van Aarle, Gaëlle Viennois, Laurie K. Amenc, Marie-Violaine Tatry and Doan T. Luu, et al. |
495-506 | Community structure of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in a primary successional volcanic desert on the southeast slope of Mount Fuji | Bingyun Wu, Taizo Hogetsu, Katsunori Isobe and Ryuichi Ishii |
507-517 | Spatial patterns of ectomycorrhizal fungal inoculum in arbuscular mycorrhizal barrens communities: implications for controlling invasion by Pinus virginiana | Rachel K. Thiet and R. E. J. Boerner |
519-526 | Sporulation and diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in Brazil Pine in the field and in the greenhouse | Milene Moreira, Marco A. Nogueira, Siu M. Tsai, Sandra M. Gomes-da-Costa and Elke J. B. N. Cardoso |
527-535 | Mycorrhizal status of Eucalyptus plantations in south China and implications for management | Ying Long Chen, Shuie Liu and Bernard Dell |
537-545 | Responses of soil microbial catabolic diversity to arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculation and soil disinfection | A. P. Dabire, V. Hien, M. Kisa, A. Bilgo and K. S. Sangare, et al. |
547-550 | Differential ability of ectomycorrhizas to survive drying | Magali di Pietro, Jean-Louis Churin and Jean Garbaye |
551-562 | Deficit irrigation promotes arbuscular colonization of fine roots by mycorrhizal fungi in grapevines (Vitis vinifera L.) in an arid climate | R. Paul Schreiner, Julie M. Tarara and Russell P. Smithyman |
563-570 | Flavonoids induce germination of basidiospores of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Suillus bovinus | Kensuke Kikuchi, Norihisa Matsushita, Kazuo Suzuki and Taizo Hogetsu |
571-580 | Gene expression profiling of a Zn-tolerant and a Zn-sensitive Suillus luteus isolate exposed to increased external zinc concentrations | L. A. H. Muller, A. R. Craciun, J. Ruytinx, M. Lambaerts and N. Verbruggen, et al. |
581-587 | Effects of arbuscular mycorrhiza and phosphorus application on artemisinin concentration in Artemisia annua L. | Rupam Kapoor, Vidhi Chaudhary and A. K. Bhatnagar |
589-596 | Quality of rooting environments and patterns of root colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in strangler figs in a Mexican palmetto woodland | Roger Guevara and Juan C. López |
597-605 | Molecular study of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi colonizing the sporophyte of the eusporangiate rattlesnake fern (Botrychium virginianum, Ophioglossaceae) | Gábor M. Kovács, Tímea Balázs and Zsolt Pénzes |
607-625 | Structural characterization and molecular identification of arbuscular mycorrhiza morphotypes of Alzatea verticillata (Alzateaceae), a prominent tree in the tropical mountain rain forest of South Ecuador | Adela Beck, Ingeborg Haug, Franz Oberwinkler and Ingrid Kottke |
627-632 | Synthesis and establishment of Tuber melanosporum Vitt. ectomycorrhizae on two Nothofagus species in Chile | Francisco Pérez, Götz Palfner, Nidia Brunel and Rómulo Santelices |
57 | In memorial–Professor Dr. agr. Fritz Schönbeck, 1926–2006 | Henning von Alten |
59-68 | Diversity and infectivity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in agricultural soils of the Sichuan Province of mainland China | Yuan Yuan Wang, Mauritz Vestberg, Christopher Walker, Timo Hurme and Xiaoping Zhang, et al. |
69-77 | Tracking mycorrhizas and extraradical mycelium of the edible fungus Lactarius deliciosus under field competition with Rhizopogon spp | Sara Hortal, Joan Pera and Javier Parladé |
79-85 | Interaction between an isolate of dark-septate fungi and its host plant Saussurea involucrata | Liqin Wu and Shunxing Guo |
87-95 | Polygonum viviparum mycobionts on an alpine primary successional glacier forefront | Oliver Mühlmann, Margit Bacher and Ursula Peintner |
97-101 | Ceratobasidiaceae mycorrhizal fungi isolated from nonphotosynthetic orchid Chamaegastrodia sikokiana | Takahiro Yagame, Masahide Yamato, Akira Suzuki and Koji Iwase |
103-110 | The co-occurrence of ectomycorrhizal, arbuscular mycorrhizal, and dark septate fungi in seedlings of four members of the Pinaceae | Cameron Wagg, Michael Pautler, Hugues B. Massicotte and R. Larry Peterson |
111-114 | Tricholoma matsutake 1-Ocen-3-ol and methyl cinnamate repel mycophagous Proisotoma minuta (Collembola: Insecta) | Takuo Sawahata, Satoshi Shimano and Masahiro Suzuki |
67 | Mycorrhiza 2009 | Vivienne Gianinazzi-Pearson and Randy Molina |
69-80 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi induce differential activation of the plasma membrane and vacuolar H+ pumps in maize roots | Alessandro C. Ramos, Marco A. Martins, Anna L. Okorokova-Façanha, Fábio Lopes Olivares and Lev A. Okorokov, et al. |
81-90 | Bacterial effects on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and mycorrhiza development as influenced by the bacteria, fungi, and host plant | Barbara Pivato, Pierre Offre, Sara Marchelli, Bruno Barbonaglia and Christophe Mougel, et al. |
91-98 | Characterization of juvenile maritime pine (Pinus pinaster Ait.) ectomycorrhizal fungal community using morphotyping, direct sequencing and fruitbodies sampling | Montserrat Pestaña Nieto and Serena Santolamazza Carbone |
99-111 | Diversity and species distribution of ectomycorrhizal fungi along productivity gradients of a southern boreal forest | J. M. Kranabetter, D. M. Durall and W. H. MacKenzie |
113-123 | Response of endangered plant species to inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and soil bacteria | Szymon Zubek, Katarzyna Turnau, Merope Tsimilli-Michael and Reto J. Strasser |
125-131 | A modified staining technique for arbuscular mycorrhiza compatible with molecular probes | M. Pitet, A. Camprubí, C. Calvet and V. Estaún |
221-230 | Evidence of adaptive tolerance to nickel in isolates of Cenococcum geophilum from serpentine soils | Susana C. Gonçalves, M. Amélia Martins-Loução and Helena Freitas |
231-238 | Distribution of ectomycorrhizal and pathogenic fungi in soil along a vegetational change from Japanese black pine (Pinus thunbergii) to black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) | Takeshi Taniguchi, Ryota Kataoka, Shigenobu Tamai, Norikazu Yamanaka and Kazuyoshi Futai |
239-246 | The arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis links N mineralization to plant demand | A. Atul-Nayyar, C. Hamel, K. Hanson and J. Germida |
247-254 | Phylogenetic analysis of the Glomeromycota by partial β-tubulin gene sequences | Zola Msiska and Joseph B. Morton |
255-266 | Influence of soil organic matter decomposition on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in terms of asymbiotic hyphal growth and root colonization | Milan Gryndler, Hana Hršelová, Tomáš Cajthaml, Marie Havránková and Veronika Řezáčová, et al. |
267-276 | The effect of fertilization on the below-ground diversity and community composition of ectomycorrhizal fungi associated with western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) | Shannon H. A. Wright, Shannon M. Berch and Mary L. Berbee |
277-282 | Bacterial communities associated with tuberculate ectomycorrhizae of Rhizopogon spp. | Annette M. Kretzer, Zachary R. King and Shasha Bai |
283-285 | FESIN workshops at ESA—the mycelial network grows | Thomas R. Horton, A. Elizabeth Arnold and Thomas D. Bruns |
287-294 | Striga seed-germination activity of root exudates and compounds present in stems of Striga host and nonhost (trap crop) plants is reduced due to root colonization by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | V. Lendzemo, T. W. Kuyper and H. Vierheilig |
295-304 | Fern-associated arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi are represented by multiple Glomus spp.: do environmental factors influence partner identity? | Brittany West, Jessica Brandt, Kay Holstien, April Hill and Malcolm Hill |
305-316 | Influence of soil nutrients on ectomycorrhizal communities in a chronosequence of mixed temperate forests | Brendan D. Twieg, Daniel M. Durall, Suzanne W. Simard and Melanie D. Jones |
317-328 | Molecular diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in onion roots from organic and conventional farming systems in the Netherlands | Guillermo A. Galván, István Parádi, Karin Burger, Jacqueline Baar and Thomas W. Kuyper, et al. |
329-335 | Ectomycorrhizal fungal community in alkaline-saline soil in northeastern China | Takahide A. Ishida, Kazuhide Nara, Shurong Ma, Tetsuo Takano and Shenkui Liu |
337-345 | Characterization of beech ectomycorrhizae formed by species of the Pachyphloeus–Amylascus lineage | Zsolt Erős-Honti and Erzsébet Jakucs |
347-356 | Extraradical mycelium network of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi allows fast colonization of seedlings under in vitro conditions | Liesbeth Voets, Ivan Enrique de la Providencia, Kalyanne Fernandez, Marleen IJdo and Sylvie Cranenbrouck, et al. |
357-363 | Arbuscular, ecto-related, orchid mycorrhizas—three independent structural lineages towards mycoheterotrophy: implications for classification? | Stephan Imhof |
365-374 | Fenpropimorph slows down the sterol pathway and the development of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices | E. Campagnac, J. Fontaine, A. Lounès-Hadj Sahraoui, F. Laruelle and R. Durand, et al. |
375-392 | Promiscuous arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis of yam (Dioscorea spp.), a key staple crop in West Africa | Atti Tchabi, Stefanie Burger, Danny Coyne, Fabien Hountondji and Louis Lawouin, et al. |
393-402 | Development and activity of Glomus intraradices as affected by co-existence with Glomus claroideum in one root system | Martina Janoušková, Pascale Seddas, Libor Mrnka, Diederik van Tuinen and Anna Dvořáčková, et al. |
403-416 | Establishment of ectomycorrhizal fungal community on isolated Nothofagus cunninghamii seedlings regenerating on dead wood in Australian wet temperate forests: does fruit-body type matter? | Leho Tedersoo, Genevieve Gates, Chris W. Dunk, Teresa Lebel and Tom W. May, et al. |
417-423 | Diversity of root-associated fungal endophytes in Rhododendron fortunei in subtropical forests of China | Chunying Zhang, Lijuan Yin and Silan Dai |
425-434 | Ostryopsis davidiana seedlings inoculated with ectomycorrhizal fungi facilitate formation of mycorrhizae on Pinus tabulaeformis seedlings | Shu-Lan Bai, Guo-Lei Li, Yong Liu, R. Kasten Dumroese and Rui-Heng Lv |
435-441 | A Medicago truncatula mutant hyper-responsive to mycorrhiza and defective for nodulation | Dominique Morandi, Christine le Signor, Vivienne Gianinazzi-Pearson and Gérard Duc |
443-448 | Role of the modification in root exudation induced by arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization on the intraradical growth of Phytophthora nicotianae in tomato | L. Lioussanne, M. Jolicoeur and M. St-Arnaud |
449-459 | Strigolactones, signals for parasitic plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | J. M. García-Garrido, V. Lendzemo, V. Castellanos-Morales, S. Steinkellner and Horst Vierheilig |
461-467 | Mycorrhizal synthesis of Tuber indicum with two indigenous hosts, Castanea mollissima and Pinus armandii | Li-Ying Geng, Xiang-Hua Wang, Fu-Qiang Yu, Xiao-Juan Deng and Xiao-Fei Tian, et al. |
469-479 | Expression of genes involved in symbiotic carbon and nitrogen transport in Pinus taeda mycorrhizal roots exposed to CO2 enrichment and nitrogen fertilization | Jeri Lynn Parrent and Rytas Vilgalys |
481-492 | The ectomycorrhizal morphotype Pinirhiza sclerotia is formed by Acephala macrosclerotiorum sp. nov., a close relative of Phialocephala fortinii | Babette Münzenberger, Ben Bubner, Jens Wöllecke, Thomas N. Sieber and Robert Bauer, et al. |
493-500 | Does forest liming impact the enzymatic profiles of ectomycorrhizal communities through specialized fungal symbionts? | François Rineau and Jean Garbaye |
501-513 | Isolation and sequence analysis of a β-tubulin gene from arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | Zola Msiska and Joseph B. Morton |
515 | Characterization of mycorrhizal fungi isolated from the threatened Cypripedium macranthos in a northern island of Japan: two phylogenetically distinct fungi associated with the orchid | Hanako Shimura, Mai Sadamoto, Mayumi Matsuura, Takayuki Kawahara and Shigeo Naito, et al. |
73-88 | Land use practices and ectomycorrhizal fungal communities from oak woodlands dominated by Quercus suber L. considering drought scenarios | Anabela Marisa Azul, João Paulo Sousa, Reinhard Agerer, María P. Martín and Helena Freitas |
89-101 | Does mycorrhization influence herbivore-induced volatile emission in Medicago truncatula? | Margit Leitner, Roland Kaiser, Bettina Hause, Wilhelm Boland and Axel Mithöfer |
103-115 | Comparative study of mycorrhizal susceptibility and anatomy of four palm species | Beatriz Dreyer, Asunción Morte, José Ángel López and Mario Honrubia |
117-126 | Both the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Gigaspora rosea and Frankia increase root system branching and reduce root hair frequency in Alnus glutinosa | Michail Orfanoudakis, Christopher T. Wheeler and John E. Hooker |
127-135 | The promoting role of an isolate of dark-septate fungus on its host plant Saussurea involucrata Kar. et Kir. | Li-qin Wu, Ya-li Lv, Zhi-xia Meng, Juan Chen and Shun-Xing Guo |
137-146 | GintABC1 encodes a putative ABC transporter of the MRP subfamily induced by Cu, Cd, and oxidative stress in Glomus intraradices | Manuel González-Guerrero, Karim Benabdellah, Ascensión Valderas, Concepción Azcón-Aguilar and Nuria Ferrol |
147-159 | Diverging diversity patterns in the Tulasnella (Basidiomycota, Tulasnellales) mycobionts of Aneura pinguis (Marchantiophyta, Metzgeriales) from Europe and Ecuador | Markus Preußing, Martin Nebel, Franz Oberwinkler and Michael Weiß |
161-166 | Response of mycorrhizal periwinkle plants to aster yellows phytoplasma infection | Maria Kamińska, Krzysztof Klamkowski, Hanna Berniak and Iwona Sowik |
167-178 | Arbuscular mycorrhiza partially protect chicory roots against oxidative stress induced by two fungicides, fenpropimorph and fenhexamid | Estelle Campagnac, Anissa Lounès-Hadj Sahraoui, Djouher Debiane, Joël Fontaine and Frédéric Laruelle, et al. |
179-190 | Ectomycorrhizal fungal communities of pedunculate and sessile oak seedlings from bare-root forest nurseries | Tomasz Leski, Marcin Pietras and Maria Rudawska |
191-200 | Impact of Piriformospora indica on tomato growth and on interaction with fungal and viral pathogens | Ahmad Fakhro, Diana Rocío Andrade-Linares, Susanne von Bargen, Martina Bandte and Carmen Büttner, et al. |
201-207 | Fast track in vitro mycorrhization of potato plantlets allow studies on gene expression dynamics | Adrien Gallou, Nathalie De Jaeger, Sylvie Cranenbrouck and Stéphane Declerck |
209-215 | Ectomycorrhizal species associated with Pinus radiata in New Zealand including novel associations determined by molecular analysis | Katrin Walbert, Tod D. Ramsfield, Hayley J. Ridgway and E. Eirian Jones |
293-306 | Optimization of culture conditions of Arnica montana L.: effects of mycorrhizal fungi and competing plants | Anna Jurkiewicz, Przemyslaw Ryszka, Teresa Anielska, Piotr Waligórski and Dobroslawa Białońska, et al. |
307-313 | Sebacinales are associates of the leafy liverwort Lophozia excisa in the southern maritime Antarctic | Kevin K. Newsham and Paul D. Bridge |
315-324 | Relationship between genotype and soil environment during colonization of poplar roots by mycorrhizal and endophytic fungi | Leszek Karliński, Maria Rudawska, Barbara Kieliszewska-Rokicka and Tomasz Leski |
325-332 | Influence of arbuscular mycorrhiza on lipid peroxidation and antioxidant enzyme activity of maize plants under temperature stress | Xiancan Zhu, Fengbin Song and Hongwen Xu |
333-339 | In vitro ectomycorrhizal specificity between the Asian red pine Pinus densiflora and Tricholoma matsutake and allied species from worldwide Pinaceae and Fagaceae forests | Akiyoshi Yamada, Hisayasu Kobayashi, Hitoshi Murata, Erbil Kalmiş and Fatih Kalyoncu, et al. |
341-348 | Fungal root endophytes of the carnivorous plant Drosera rotundifolia | Richard S. Quilliam and David L. Jones |
349-360 | Can NPK fertilizers enhance seedling growth and mycorrhizal status of Tuber melanosporum-inoculated Quercus ilex seedlings? | Laura M. Suz, María P. Martín, Christine R. Fischer, José A. Bonet and Carlos Colinas |
361-363 | Gopi Krishna Podila
|
365-373 | The influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization on soil–root hydraulic conductance in Agrostis stolonifera L. under two water regimes | Victoria Gonzalez-Dugo |
375-390 | Taxonomic and functional characterisation of fungi from the Sebacina vermifera complex from common and rare orchids in the genus Caladenia | Magali M. Wright, Rob Cross, Roger D. Cousens, Tom W. May and Cassandra B. McLean |
391-397 | Structural characteristics of root–fungus associations in two mycoheterotrophic species, Allotropa virgata and Pleuricospora fimbriolata (Monotropoideae), from southwest Oregon, USA | Hugues B. Massicotte, Lewis H. Melville, R. Larry Peterson, Linda E. Tackaberry and Daniel L. Luoma |
399-406 | Nickel remediation by AM-colonized sunflower | Keomany Ker and Christiane Charest |
407-414 | Behavior of mercury in a soil–plant system as affected by inoculation with the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus mosseae | Yang Yu, Shuzhen Zhang and Honglin Huang |
415-425 | Impact of multispores in vitro subcultivation of Glomus sp. MUCL 43194 (DAOM 197198) on vegetative compatibility and genetic diversity detected by AFLP | Antonio Cárdenas-Flores, Xavier Draye, Céline Bivort, Sylvie Cranenbrouck and Stéphane Declerck |
427-443 | Symbiosis-related pea genes modulate fungal and plant gene expression during the arbuscule stage of mycorrhiza with Glomus intraradices | Elena Kuznetsova, Pascale M. A. Seddas-Dozolme, Christine Arnould, Marie Tollot and Diederik van Tuinen, et al. |
445-457 | The potential role of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in protecting endangered plants and habitats | Hermann Bothe, Katarzyna Turnau and Marjana Regvar |
459-471 | Isolation and identification of Rhizoctonia-like fungi from roots of three orchid genera, Paphiopedilum, Dendrobium, and Cymbidium, collected in Chiang Rai and Chiang Mai provinces of Thailand | Sureeporn Nontachaiyapoom, Sawitree Sasirat and Leka Manoch |
473-481 | Ectomycorrhizal community structure of different genotypes of Scots pine under forest nursery conditions | Tomasz Leski, Algis Aučina, Audrius Skridaila, Marcin Pietras and Edvardas Riepšas, et al. |
483-496 | Phylogenies from genetic and morphological characters do not support a revision of Gigasporaceae (Glomeromycota) into four families and five genera | Joseph B. Morton and Zola Msiska |
497-504 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi alter thymol derivative contents of Inula ensifolia L. | Szymon Zubek, Anna Stojakowska, Teresa Anielska and Katarzyna Turnau |
505-509 | Effects of stump and slash removal on growth and mycorrhization of Picea abies seedlings outplanted on a forest clear-cut | Audrius Menkis, Antti Uotila, Natalija Arhipova and Rimvydas Vasaitis |
511-518 | Ectomycorrhization of Tricholoma matsutake and two major conifers in Finland—an assessment of in vitro mycorrhiza formation | Lu-Min Vaario, Taina Pennanen, Tytti Sarjala, Eira-Maija Savonen and Jussi Heinonsalo |
519-530 | Agroecology: the key role of arbuscular mycorrhizas in ecosystem services | Silvio Gianinazzi, Armelle Gollotte, Marie-Noëlle Binet, Diederik van Tuinen and Dirk Redecker, et al. |
531-540 | Identification of differentially expressed genes of the fungus Hydnangium sp. during the pre-symbiotic phase of the ectomycorrhizal association with Eucalyptus grandis | Irene da Silva Coelho, Marisa Vieira de Queiroz, Maurício Dutra Costa, Maria Catarina Megumi Kasuya and Elza Fernandes de Araújo |
541-549 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi colonization and phosphorus nutrition in organic field pea and lentil | Julia M. Baird, Fran L. Walley and Steven J. Shirtliffe |
551-557 | Arbuscular mycorrhiza of Arnica montana under field conditions—conventional and molecular studies | Przemysław Ryszka, Janusz Błaszkowski, Anna Jurkiewicz and Katarzyna Turnau |
559-568 | Mycorrhizal specificity, preference, and plasticity of six slipper orchids from South Western China | Li Yuan, Zhu L. Yang, Shu-Yun Li, Hong Hu and Jia-Lin Huang |
569-575 | Craterellus fallax, a Black Trumpet mushroom from eastern North America with a broad host range | Patrick Brandon Matheny, Emily A. Austin, Joshua M. Birkebak and Aaron D. Wolfenbarger |
1-16 | Methods for large-scale production of AM fungi: past, present, and future | Marleen IJdo, Sylvie Cranenbrouck and Stéphane Declerck |
17-25 | The AD-type ectomycorrhizas, one of the most common morphotypes present in truffle fields, result from fungi belonging to the Trichophaea woolhopeia species complex | Andrea Rubini, Beatrice Belfiori, Valentina Passeri, Leonardo Baciarelli Falini and Sergio Arcioni, et al. |
27-33 | The differential behavior of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in interaction with Astragalus sinicus L. under salt stress | Jin Peng, Yan Li, Ping Shi, Xiuhua Chen and Hui Lin, et al. |
35-51 | Carbon allocation in ectomycorrhizal plants at limited and optimal N supply: an attempt at unraveling conflicting theories | Ana Corrêa, Rüdiger Hampp, Elisabeth Magel and Maria-Amélia Martins-Loução |
53-64 | Effects of nursery preconditioning through mycorrhizal inoculation and drought in Arbutus unedo L. plants | Alejandra Navarro García, Sebastián del Pilar Bañón Árias, Asunción Morte and María Jesús Sánchez-Blanco |
65-70 | Tree age influences on the development of edible ectomycorrhizal fungi sporocarps in Pinus sylvestris stands | Pedro Ortega-Martínez, Beatriz Águeda, Luz Marina Fernández-Toirán and Fernando Martínez-Peña |
71-90 | Ectomycorrhizas and water relations of trees: a review | Tarja Lehto and Janusz J. Zwiazek |
91-96 | The mycorrhizal status and colonization of 26 tree species growing in urban and rural environments | Luke D. Bainard, John N. Klironomos and Andrew M. Gordon |
97-104 | Pectin localization in the Mediterranean orchid Limodorum abortivum reveals modulation of the plant interface in response to different mycorrhizal fungi | Chiara Paduano, Michele Rodda, Enrico Ercole, Mariangela Girlanda and Silvia Perotto |
105-115 | Two sebacinoid ectomycorrhizae on Chinese pine | Jie Wei and Reinhard Agerer |
117-129 | Elemental composition of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi at high salinity | Edith C. Hammer, Hafedh Nasr, Jan Pallon, Pål Axel Olsson and Håkan Wallander |
131-137 | Genetic population structure of the ectomycorrhizal fungus Pisolithus microcarpus suggests high gene flow in south-eastern Australia | Catherine J. Hitchcock, Susan M. Chambers and John W. G. Cairney |
139-144 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal propagules in soils from a tropical forest and an abandoned cornfield in Quintana Roo, Mexico: visual comparison of most-probable-number estimates | José A. Ramos-Zapata, Patricia Guadarrama, Jorge Navarro-Alberto and Roger Orellana |
145-154 | Transcriptome analysis by cDNA-AFLP of Suillus luteus Cd-tolerant and Cd-sensitive isolates | Joske Ruytinx, Adrian R. Craciun, Karen Verstraelen, Jaco Vangronsveld and Jan V. Colpaert, et al. |
155-165 | Boron and other elements in sporophores of ectomycorrhizal and saprotrophic fungi | Anu Lavola, Pedro J. Aphalo and Tarja Lehto |
167-171 | Optimizing tillage schedule for maintaining activity of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal population in a rainfed upland rice (Oryza sativa L.) agro-ecosystem | D. Maiti, M. Variar and R. K. Singh |
173-181 | Effects of co-inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and rhizobia on soybean growth as related to root architecture and availability of N and P | Xiurong Wang, Qiang Pan, Fengxian Chen, Xiaolong Yan and Hong Liao |
183-193 | Soil–strain compatibility: the key to effective use of arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculants? | Ricardo A. Herrera-Peraza, Chantal Hamel, Félix Fernández, Roberto L. Ferrer and Eduardo Furrazola |
195-209 | Unique arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities uncovered in date palm plantations and surrounding desert habitats of Southern Arabia | Mohamed N. Al-Yahya’ei, Fritz Oehl, Marta Vallino, Erica Lumini and Dirk Redecker, et al. |
211-220 | Mechanical soil disturbance as a determinant of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities in semi-natural grassland | Tim Krone Schnoor, Ylva Lekberg, Søren Rosendahl and Pål Axel Olsson |
221-229 | Endophytic fungi from Pecteilis susannae (L.) Rafin (Orchidaceae), a threatened terrestrial orchid in Thailand | Ruangwut Chutima, Bernard Dell, Suyanee Vessabutr, Boonsom Bussaban and Saisamorn Lumyong |
231-236 | Structural changes to a mycothallus along a latitudinal transect through the maritime and sub-Antarctic | Kevin K. Newsham |
237-245 | Ectomycorrhizal fungal communities on seedlings and conspecific trees of Pinus mugo grown on the coastal dunes of the Curonian Spit in Lithuania | Algis Aučina, Maria Rudawska, Tomasz Leski, Darius Ryliškis and Marcin Pietras, et al. |
247-253 | Effect of water stress on in vitro mycelium cultures of two mycorrhizal desert truffles | Alfonso Navarro-Ródenas, M. Cecilia Lozano-Carrillo, Manuela Pérez-Gilabert and Asunción Morte |
255-267 | Species richness and spore abundance of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi across distinct land uses in Western Brazilian Amazon | Sidney Luiz Stürmer and José Oswaldo Siqueira |
269-277 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal mediation of biomass–density relationship of Medicago sativa L. under two water conditions in a field experiment | Qian Zhang, Liming Xu, Jianjun Tang, Minge Bai and Xin Chen |
279-288 | Effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on seedling growth and development of two wetland plants, Bidens frondosa L., and Eclipta prostrata (L.) L., grown under three levels of water availability | Kevin J. Stevens, Christopher B. Wall and Joel A. Janssen |
289-296 | Weak habitat specificity in ectomycorrhizal communities associated with Salix herbacea and Salix polaris in alpine tundra | Martin Ryberg, Mathias Andreasen and Robert G. Björk |
297-308 | Host preferences and differential contributions of deciduous tree species shape mycorrhizal species richness in a mixed Central European forest | Christa Lang, Jasmin Seven and Andrea Polle |
309-314 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal inoculum potential: a mechanism promoting positive diversity–invasibility relationships in mountain beech forests in New Zealand? | Laura A. Spence, Ian A. Dickie and David A. Coomes |
315-321 | Uvitex2B: a rapid and efficient stain for detection of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi within plant roots | Nathalie Diagne, Jacques Escoute, Marc Lartaud, Jean Luc Verdeil and Claudine Franche, et al. |
323-330 | Fungal root symbionts and their relationship with fine root proportion in native plants from the Bolivian Andean highlands above 3,700 m elevation | Carlos Urcelay, Julieta Acho and Richard Joffre |
331-339 | Decomposition of organic matter by the ericoid mycorrhizal endophytes of Formosan rhododendron (Rhododendron formosanum Hemsl.) | Lei-Chen Lin, Ming-Jen Lee and Jin-Liang Chen |
341-349 | Impact of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi on the allergenic potential of tomato | Dietmar Schwarz, Saskia Welter, Eckhard George, Philipp Franken and Karola Lehmann, et al. |
351-361 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal diversity and species dominance in a temperate soil with long-term conventional and low-input cropping systems | Mauritz Vestberg, Helena Kahiluoto and Esa Wallius |
363-374 | Fenpropimorph and fenhexamid impact phosphorus translocation by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | Domenico Zocco, Ingrid M. Van Aarle, Elodie Oger, Luisa Lanfranco and Stéphane Declerck |
375-391 | Effects of twice-ambient carbon dioxide and nitrogen amendment on biomass, nutrient contents and carbon costs of Norway spruce seedlings as influenced by mycorrhization with Piloderma croceum and Tomentellopsis submollis | Rosemarie Barbara Weigt, Stefan Raidl, Rita Verma, Hermann Rodenkirchen and Axel Göttlein, et al. |
393-401 | Intraspecific variability of Lactarius deliciosus isolates: colonization ability and survival after cold storage | Javier Parladé, Sara Hortal, Herminia de la Varga and Joan Pera |
403-412 | Ericaceous dwarf shrubs affect ectomycorrhizal fungal community of the invasive Pinus strobus and native Pinus sylvestris in a pot experiment | Petr Kohout, Zuzana Sýkorová, Mohammad Bahram, Věroslava Hadincová and Jana Albrechtová, et al. |
413-422 | Effects of dark septate endophytes on tomato plant performance | Diana Rocio Andrade-Linares, Rita Grosch, Silvia Restrepo, Angelika Krumbein and Philipp Franken |
423-430 | Influence of arbuscular mycorrhiza on organic solutes in maize leaves under salt stress | Min Sheng, Ming Tang, Fengfeng Zhang and Yanhui Huang |
431-441 | Molecular characterization of pezizalean ectomycorrhizas associated with pinyon pine during drought | Galena J. Gordon and Catherine A. Gehring |
443-449 | The sterol biosynthesis inhibitor molecule fenhexamid impacts the vegetative compatibility of Glomus clarum | Antonio Cardenas-Flores, Sylvie Cranenbrouck, Xavier Draye, Alain Guillet and Bernadette Govaerts, et al. |
451-452 | 1st International congress on mycorrhizal symbiosis: ecosystems and environment of Mediterranean area (MYCOMED) | Diégane Diouf, Marc Ducousso, Silvio Gianinazzi, Michel Lebrun and Corinne Leyval |
453-464 | Analysis of ribosomal RNA indicates seasonal fungal community dynamics in Andropogon gerardii roots | Ari Jumpponen |
465-471 | First report of the ectomycorrhizal status of boletes on the Northern Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico determined using isotopic methods | Niles J. Hasselquist, Greg W. Douhan and Michael F. Allen |
473-493 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis elicits proteome responses opposite of P-starvation in SO4 grapevine rootstock upon root colonisation with two Glomus species | Gabriela Claudia Cangahuala-Inocente, Maguida Fabiana Da Silva, Jean-Martial Johnson, Anicet Manga and Diederik van Tuinen, et al. |
495-503 | RETRACTED ARTICLE: Influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and copper on growth, accumulation of osmolyte, mineral nutrition and antioxidant enzyme activity of pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) | Arafat Abdel Hamed Abdel Latef |
505-514 | In situ analysis of anastomosis in representative genera of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | Sonia Purin and Joseph B. Morton |
515-522 | Dosage-dependent shift in the spore community of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi following application of tannery sludge | André S. Nakatani, Denise L. C. Mescolotti, Marco A. Nogueira, Alexandre M. Martines and Marina Y. H. Miyauchi, et al. |
523-535 | Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi associated with Artemisia umbelliformis Lam, an endangered aromatic species in Southern French Alps, influence plant P and essential oil contents | Marie-Noëlle Binet, Diederik van Tuinen, Nicolas Deprêtre, Nathalie Koszela and Catherine Chambon, et al. |
537-547 | Quercus rubra-associated ectomycorrhizal fungal communities of disturbed urban sites and mature forests | Amy S. Karpati, Steven N. Handel, John Dighton and Thomas R. Horton |
549-558 | Common environmental factors explain both ectomycorrhizal species diversity and pine regeneration variability in a post-fire Mediterranean forest | Erika Buscardo, Helena Freitas, João Santos Pereira and Paolo De Angelis |
559-568 | Ectomycorrhizal fungi in Mexican Alnus forests support the host co-migration hypothesis and continental-scale patterns in phylogeography | Peter G. Kennedy, Roberto Garibay-Orijel, Logan M. Higgins and Rodolfo Angeles-Arguiz |
569-576 | Mycorrhizal fungi associated with Monotropastrum humile (Ericaceae) in central Japan | Yosuke Matsuda, Shun Okochi, Tomoyuki Katayama, Akiyoshi Yamada and Shin-ichiro Ito |
577-587 | Acaulospora brasiliensis comb. nov. and Acaulospora alpina (Glomeromycota) from upland Scotland: morphology, molecular phylogeny and DNA-based detection in roots | Manuela Krüger, Christopher Walker and Arthur Schüßler |
589-600 | Optimized assay and storage conditions for enzyme activity profiling of ectomycorrhizae | Karin Pritsch, Pierre Emanuel Courty, Jean-Louis Churin, Benoit Cloutier-Hurteau and Muhammad Arif Ali, et al. |
601-612 | Ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity in orchards of cultivated pecan (Carya illinoinensis; Juglandaceae) | Gregory Bonito, Timothy Brenneman and Rytas Vilgalys |
613-622 | The best for the guest: high Andean nurse cushions of Azorella madreporica enhance arbuscular mycorrhizal status in associated plant species | M. Angélica Casanova-Katny, Gustavo Adolfo Torres-Mellado, Goetz Palfner and Lohengrin A. Cavieres |
623-630 | Mycorrhizal association between the desert truffle Terfezia boudieri and Helianthemum sessiliflorum alters plant physiology and fitness to arid conditions | Tidhar Turgeman, Jiftach Ben Asher, Nurit Roth-Bejerano, Varda Kagan-Zur and Yoram Kapulnik, et al. |
631-639 | Specific arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi associated with non-photosynthetic Petrosavia sakuraii (Petrosaviaceae) | Masahide Yamato, Takahiro Yagame, Norihiro Shimomura, Koji Iwase and Hiroshi Takahashi, et al. |
641-650 | Extraradical mycelium of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi radiating from large plants depresses the growth of nearby seedlings in a nutrient deficient substrate | Martina Janoušková, Jana Rydlová, David Püschel, Jiřina Száková and Miroslav Vosátka |
651-658 | Effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomus intraradices) on the oviposition of rice water weevil (Lissorhoptrus oryzophilus) | Marco Cosme, Michael J. Stout and Susanne Wurst |
659-667 | Integration of crop rotation and arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) inoculum application for enhancing AM activity to improve phosphorus nutrition and yield of upland rice (Oryza sativa L.) | Dipankar Maiti, Neha Nancy Toppo and Mukund Variar |
669-680 | Diversity and composition of ectomycorrhizal community on seedling roots: the role of host preference and soil origin | Qiong Ding, Yu Liang, Pierre Legendre, Xin-hua He and Ke-quan Pei, et al. |
681-688 | Diversity of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in greenhouse soils continuously planted to watermelon in North China | Hui Jiao, Yinglong Chen, Xiangui Lin and Runjin Liu |
689-702 | Symbiont identity matters: carbon and phosphorus fluxes between Medicago truncatula and different arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi | Mark Lendenmann, Cécile Thonar, Romain L. Barnard, Yann Salmon and Roland A. Werner, et al. |
703-719 | Effect of controlled inoculation with specific mycorrhizal fungi from the urban environment on growth and physiology of containerized shade tree species growing under different water regimes | Alessio Fini, Piero Frangi, Gabriele Amoroso, Riccardo Piatti and Marco Faoro, et al. |
721-731 | Induction of DIMBOA accumulation and systemic defense responses as a mechanism of enhanced resistance of mycorrhizal corn (Zea mays L.) to sheath blight | Yuan Yuan Song, Man Cao, Li Jun Xie, Xiao Ting Liang and Ren Sen Zeng, et al. |
733 | Erratum to: Influence of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and copper on growth, accumulation of osmolyte, mineral nutrition and antioxidant enzyme activity of pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) | Arafat Abdel Hamed Abdel Latef |