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14 results on '"Sebacinales"'

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1. Transcriptomics reveal a mechanism of niche defense: two beneficial root endophytes deploy an antimicrobial GH18‐CBM5 chitinase to protect their hosts.

2. Stigmatodactylus sikokianus (Orchidaceae) mainly acquires carbon from decaying litter through association with a specific clade of Serendipitaceae.

3. Mycorrhizal associates of Cephalanthera falcata (Orchidaceae) in a habitat with giant individuals.

4. Fine-scale spatial distribution of orchid mycorrhizal fungi in the soil of host-rich grasslands.

5. Fungal partner shifts during the evolution of mycoheterotrophy in Neottia.

6. Two widespread green Neottia species ( Orchidaceae) show mycorrhizal preference for Sebacinales in various habitats and ontogenetic stages.

7. Temporal patterns of orchid mycorrhizal fungi in meadows and forests as revealed by 454 pyrosequencing.

8. Sebacinales, but not total root associated fungal communities, are affected by land-use intensity.

9. Determinants of root-associated fungal communities within Asteraceae in a semi-arid grassland.

10. Fungal host specificity is not a bottleneck for the germination of Pyroleae species ( Ericaceae) in a Bavarian forest.

11. SHIFTS IN MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI DURING THE EVOLUTION OF AUTOTROPHY TO MYCOHETEROTROPHY IN CYMBIDIUM (ORCHIDACEAE).

12. Sebacinales are common mycorrhizal associates of Ericaceae.

13. Sebacinales form ectendomycorrhizas with Cavendishia nobilis, a member of the Andean clade of Ericaceae, in the mountain rain forest of southern Ecuador.

14. A case of Pyrola plantlets with picky palates leads to new insights on mycoheterotrophic seedlings and the fungi that feed them.

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