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Mohammad Bahram

Researcher at Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

Publications -  113
Citations -  14325

Mohammad Bahram is an academic researcher from Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biology. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 94 publications receiving 9865 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohammad Bahram include University of Tartu & Uppsala University.

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Tree diversity and species identity effects on soil fungi, protists and animals are context dependent

TL;DR: This work developed a DNA metabarcoding approach to identify the major eukaryote groups directly from soil with roughly species-level resolution and revealed that on a local scale, soil resources and tree species have stronger effect on diversity of soil biota than tree species richness per se.
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Regional and local patterns of ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity and community structure along an altitudinal gradient in the Hyrcanian forests of northern Iran.

TL;DR: The decline of ectomycorrhizal fungal richness with increasing altitude is consistent with the general altitudinal richness patterns of macroorganisms, and low environmental energy reduces the competitive ability of rare species and thus has a negative effect on the richness of ectonic fungi.
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FungalTraits: a user-friendly traits database of fungi and fungus-like stramenopiles

Sergei Põlme, +135 more
- 01 Nov 2020 - 
TL;DR: Fungal traits and character database FungalTraits operating at genus and species hypothesis levels is presented in this article, which includes 17 lifestyle related traits of fungal and Stramenopila genera.
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Stochastic distribution of small soil eukaryotes resulting from high dispersal and drift in a local environment

TL;DR: A random distribution of soil eukaryotes with respect to space and environment in the absence of environmental gradients at the local scale is indicated, reflecting the dominant role of drift and homogenizing dispersal.
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Local‐scale biogeography and spatiotemporal variability in communities of mycorrhizal fungi

TL;DR: Although there was no significant trend in spatiotemporal variation amongmycorrhizal types, the vertical community variation was distinctly greater than the spatial and temporal variability in mycorrhIZal fungal communities, suggesting that greater environmental heterogeneity drives community variation on a fine scale.