2018
DOI: 10.1111/nph.15036
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Lost in diversity: the interactions between soil‐borne fungi, biodiversity and plant productivity

Abstract: Summary There is consensus that plant species richness enhances plant productivity within natural grasslands, but the underlying drivers remain debated. Recently, differential accumulation of soil‐borne fungal pathogens across the plant diversity gradient has been proposed as a cause of this pattern. However, the below‐ground environment has generally been treated as a ‘black box’ in biodiversity experiments, leaving these fungi unidentified.Using next generation sequencing and pathogenicity assays, we analyse… Show more

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Cited by 172 publications
(188 citation statements)
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“…The fraction of OTUs that matched well-described, i.e. cultured, species in the studies mentioned above ranged from only 10% (Tedersoo et al 2014) to 39% (Mommer et al 2018). Furthermore, when sequences from uncultured fungi are included in the matches, still 10-30% of fungal …”
Section: Soil-borne Pathogenic Fungi In Species-rich Grasslandsmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…The fraction of OTUs that matched well-described, i.e. cultured, species in the studies mentioned above ranged from only 10% (Tedersoo et al 2014) to 39% (Mommer et al 2018). Furthermore, when sequences from uncultured fungi are included in the matches, still 10-30% of fungal …”
Section: Soil-borne Pathogenic Fungi In Species-rich Grasslandsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…When re-introduced, four of these Pythium species reduced plant biomass of both grasses, while another grass (Anthoxanthum odoratum) and a forb (Plantago lanceolata) were not adversely affected. Recently, Mommer et al (2018) isolated 27 fungal species from symptomatic roots of the grass Anthoxanthum odoratum and the forb Leucanthemum vulgare in a grassland biodiversity experiment. Two of them (Magnaporthiopsis panicorum and Paraphoma chrysanthemicola) induced adverse host-specific effects on seedling biomass, when inoculated on different plants species (Mommer et al 2018).…”
Section: Soil-borne Pathogenic Fungi In Species-rich Grasslandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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