Mycorrhizal fungal establishment in agricultural soils: factors determining inoculation success.
Citations
2,261 citations
1,051 citations
Cites background from "Mycorrhizal fungal establishment in..."
...Examples of habitat patches where community assembly occurs include forest gaps created by a landslide (Walker & Shiels 2013), river floodplains denuded by a flood (Fukami et al. 2013), www.annualreviews.org • Historical Contingency in Community Assembly 3 Changes may still occur before final…...
[...]
657 citations
Cites background from "Mycorrhizal fungal establishment in..."
...Nevertheless, field application often fails to counteract pathogen development due to insufficient rhizo- and/or endosphere colonisation (Compant et al. 2010; Verbruggen et al. 2013)....
[...]
527 citations
Cites background from "Mycorrhizal fungal establishment in..."
...Unfortunately, solid inoculation practices have yet to be implemented, and applied research focused on defining the best inoculum formulation strategies (Verbruggen et al., 2013) should be encouraged....
[...]
371 citations
References
3,673 citations
2,261 citations
579 citations
"Mycorrhizal fungal establishment in..." refers background in this paper
...Limited movement (due to underground spore-112 formation) and strong local adaptation (Johnson et al., 2010) will potentially amplify each 113 other, and may strongly hamper invasibility of local AMF assemblages by non-local strains....
[...]
432 citations
"Mycorrhizal fungal establishment in..." refers background in this paper
...143 As a result, they are often occupied by fewer taxa than more natural systems, and these taxa 144 are presumably well-adapted to agricultural conditions (Oehl et al., 2010; Schnoor et al., 145 2011)....
[...]
...One promising approach would be to match potential inoculants with 147 specific field conditions, such as tillage environment (Schnoor et al., 2011), soil type and pH 148 (Oehl et al., 2010) and breadth of potential hosts (Öpik & Moora, 2012)....
[...]
...Agricultural 92 systems typically harbour lower AMF diversity than natural systems (Verbruggen et al., 93 2010), and these systems are often dominated by a few select taxa within the AMF order 94 Glomerales (Oehl et al., 2010)....
[...]
410 citations