Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes

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Standard

Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes. / Kjøller, Rasmus; Olsrud, Maria; Michelsen, Anders.

I: Fungal Ecology, Bind 3, Nr. 3, 08.2010, s. 205-214.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kjøller, R, Olsrud, M & Michelsen, A 2010, 'Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes', Fungal Ecology, bind 3, nr. 3, s. 205-214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.funeco.2009.10.005

APA

Kjøller, R., Olsrud, M., & Michelsen, A. (2010). Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes. Fungal Ecology, 3(3), 205-214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.funeco.2009.10.005

Vancouver

Kjøller R, Olsrud M, Michelsen A. Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes. Fungal Ecology. 2010 aug.;3(3):205-214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.funeco.2009.10.005

Author

Kjøller, Rasmus ; Olsrud, Maria ; Michelsen, Anders. / Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes. I: Fungal Ecology. 2010 ; Bind 3, Nr. 3. s. 205-214.

Bibtex

@article{c82f80b0d8ff11dea1f3000ea68e967b,
title = "Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes",
abstract = "During the last decade, culture-independent identification tools have widened our knowledge of fungi colonizing ericaceous roots including ericoid mycorrhizal fungi. One focal interest has been to identify fungi, which simultaneously can establish ericoid and ectomycorrhiza, while knowledge about the fungal composition in roots of co-existing ericaceous plants is scarce. In the present paper, the fungal community in roots of four ericaceous plant species, Empetrum hermaphroditum, Andromeda polifolia, Vaccinium uliginosum and Vaccinium vitis-idaea which often dominate subarctic heaths and mires, was studied. From each of these plants, in each of five plots, clone libraries were established using fungal specific ITS-PCR followed by cloning, PCR–RFLP and sequencing. The clone libraries were dominated by potential ericoid mycorrhizal fungi, particularly Rhizoscyphus ericae, fungi belonging to the Sebacinales group B, and Capronia-like fungi. Additionally, the results showed that while ericaceous plant species growing within the same 15 × 15 cm blocks shared a common fungal community, plots just 2–3 m away harboured a significantly different fungal community. The possible functional implications of co-existing ericaceous plants being interlinked by a common mycelial network are discussed.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, {\O}kologi, mykologi, planter, arktis, Ecology, mycology, plants, arctic",
author = "Rasmus Kj{\o}ller and Maria Olsrud and Anders Michelsen",
note = "Keywords: Andromeda polifolia; Empetrum hermaphroditum; Ericaceous plants; Ericoid mycorrhizal fungi; Fungal community; ITS; Rhizoscyphus ericae; Vaccinium uliginosum; Vaccinium vitis-idaea",
year = "2010",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.funeco.2009.10.005",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "205--214",
journal = "Fungal Ecology",
issn = "1754-5048",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Co-existing ericaceous plant species in a subarctic mire community share fungal root endophytes

AU - Kjøller, Rasmus

AU - Olsrud, Maria

AU - Michelsen, Anders

N1 - Keywords: Andromeda polifolia; Empetrum hermaphroditum; Ericaceous plants; Ericoid mycorrhizal fungi; Fungal community; ITS; Rhizoscyphus ericae; Vaccinium uliginosum; Vaccinium vitis-idaea

PY - 2010/8

Y1 - 2010/8

N2 - During the last decade, culture-independent identification tools have widened our knowledge of fungi colonizing ericaceous roots including ericoid mycorrhizal fungi. One focal interest has been to identify fungi, which simultaneously can establish ericoid and ectomycorrhiza, while knowledge about the fungal composition in roots of co-existing ericaceous plants is scarce. In the present paper, the fungal community in roots of four ericaceous plant species, Empetrum hermaphroditum, Andromeda polifolia, Vaccinium uliginosum and Vaccinium vitis-idaea which often dominate subarctic heaths and mires, was studied. From each of these plants, in each of five plots, clone libraries were established using fungal specific ITS-PCR followed by cloning, PCR–RFLP and sequencing. The clone libraries were dominated by potential ericoid mycorrhizal fungi, particularly Rhizoscyphus ericae, fungi belonging to the Sebacinales group B, and Capronia-like fungi. Additionally, the results showed that while ericaceous plant species growing within the same 15 × 15 cm blocks shared a common fungal community, plots just 2–3 m away harboured a significantly different fungal community. The possible functional implications of co-existing ericaceous plants being interlinked by a common mycelial network are discussed.

AB - During the last decade, culture-independent identification tools have widened our knowledge of fungi colonizing ericaceous roots including ericoid mycorrhizal fungi. One focal interest has been to identify fungi, which simultaneously can establish ericoid and ectomycorrhiza, while knowledge about the fungal composition in roots of co-existing ericaceous plants is scarce. In the present paper, the fungal community in roots of four ericaceous plant species, Empetrum hermaphroditum, Andromeda polifolia, Vaccinium uliginosum and Vaccinium vitis-idaea which often dominate subarctic heaths and mires, was studied. From each of these plants, in each of five plots, clone libraries were established using fungal specific ITS-PCR followed by cloning, PCR–RFLP and sequencing. The clone libraries were dominated by potential ericoid mycorrhizal fungi, particularly Rhizoscyphus ericae, fungi belonging to the Sebacinales group B, and Capronia-like fungi. Additionally, the results showed that while ericaceous plant species growing within the same 15 × 15 cm blocks shared a common fungal community, plots just 2–3 m away harboured a significantly different fungal community. The possible functional implications of co-existing ericaceous plants being interlinked by a common mycelial network are discussed.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Økologi

KW - mykologi

KW - planter

KW - arktis

KW - Ecology

KW - mycology

KW - plants

KW - arctic

U2 - 10.1016/j.funeco.2009.10.005

DO - 10.1016/j.funeco.2009.10.005

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 205

EP - 214

JO - Fungal Ecology

JF - Fungal Ecology

SN - 1754-5048

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 16026379