Search

Your search keyword '"Read, David J."' showing total 18 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Read, David J." Remove constraint Author: "Read, David J." Topic mycorrhizae Remove constraint Topic: mycorrhizae
18 results on '"Read, David J."'

Search Results

1. Photosynthate transfer from an autotrophic orchid to conspecific heterotrophic protocorms through a common mycorrhizal network.

2. Inorganic phosphorus nutrition in green-leaved terrestrial orchid seedlings.

3. Angiosperm symbioses with non-mycorrhizal fungal partners enhance N acquisition from ancient organic matter in a warming maritime Antarctic.

4. Ancient plants with ancient fungi: liverworts associate with early-diverging arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi.

6. The dawn of symbiosis between plants and fungi.

7. Nitrogen form influences the response of Deschampsia antarctica to dark septate root endophytes.

8. Fungal specificity bottlenecks during orchid germination and development.

9. Giving and receiving: measuring the carbon cost of mycorrhizas in the green orchid, Goodyera repens.

10. Mycorrhizal acquisition of inorganic phosphorus by the green-leaved terrestrial orchid Goodyera repens.

11. Wide geographical and ecological distribution of nitrogen and carbon gains from fungi in pyroloids and monotropoids (Ericaceae) and in orchids.

12. Mutualistic mycorrhiza in orchids: evidence from plant-fungus carbon and nitrogen transfers in the green-leaved terrestrial orchid Goodyera repens.

13. The mycorrhizal community in a forest chronosequence of Sitka spruce [Picea sitchensis (Bong.) Carr.] in Northern England.

14. European and African maize cultivars differ in their physiological and molecular responses to mycorrhizal infection.

15. Soil invertebrates disrupt carbon flow through fungal networks.

16. Changing partners in the dark: isotopic and molecular evidence of ectomycorrhizal liaisons between forest orchids and trees.

17. Specialized cheating of the ectomycorrhizal symbiosis by an epiparasitic liverwort.

18. Ancient plants with ancient fungi: liverworts associate with early-diverging arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources