2019
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-15228-4_5
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A Systematic Review of South American and European Mycorrhizal Research: Is there a Need for Scientific Symbiosis?

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Cited by 8 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Despite the demonstrated benefits produced by soil microorganisms, there is ample space for gaining further insight, especially on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, which are crucial for many ecosystem services, such as nutrient cycling and food production. An example is the case of Latin America [118]. In Latin America [119] and Africa there is a need to focus on soil health and biodiversity among farmers, major agribusinesses, and policy makers, complementing the current productivity paradigm with sustainability and conservation objectives.…”
Section: The Microbial Consortiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the demonstrated benefits produced by soil microorganisms, there is ample space for gaining further insight, especially on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, which are crucial for many ecosystem services, such as nutrient cycling and food production. An example is the case of Latin America [118]. In Latin America [119] and Africa there is a need to focus on soil health and biodiversity among farmers, major agribusinesses, and policy makers, complementing the current productivity paradigm with sustainability and conservation objectives.…”
Section: The Microbial Consortiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite this impressive range of ecological conditions that can be seen as natural laboratories, many groups of organisms are not well studied in South America. Soil microorganisms are particularly under‐studied (Cameron et al ., ), especially mycorrhizal fungi (Bueno et al ., 2017a; Marín & Bueno, ), which are crucial for many ecosystem services, as nutrient cycling and food production (van der Heijden et al ., ).…”
Section: The II International Symposium Of Mycorrhizal Symbiosis In Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These knowledge gaps have limited the ability of scientists to address ecological and evolutionary questions related to the distribution and role of mycorrhizal fungi in the face of current environmental changes. The overall limitations for the development of such biodiversity studies in South America lie in an historic shortage of connections between the human and technical research resources (Marín & Bueno, ). In this context, ecological research networks are increasingly used tools to overcome these and related constraints (Richter et al ., ).…”
Section: The II International Symposium Of Mycorrhizal Symbiosis In Smentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Under this stressing soil conditions, AMF increases the plant tolerance to acidic and very dry soils with high amounts of heavy metals and lower amounts of crucial nutrients as phosphorus (Aguilera et al 2017;Santander et al 2019). Despite all these roles, it is surprising that AMF have been barely studied in commercially important species as bamboo (Jiang et al 2013;Muthukumar and Udaiyan 2006), and also very little in the Cerrado region (Marín and Bueno 2019). In order to understand the ecological interactions, geographical distribution, biogeochemical cycles, and the potential of restoration and micro-propagation of bamboo, it is fundamental to elucidate the composition of the associated AMF community, as these symbiont fungi are crucial in all these processes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%