2016
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-121415-032238
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Abstract: The Numbers Game 15:30-16:30 1h Coffee-break / Posters Session 1) Taxonomic and functional diversity of microbial communities 16:30-18:10

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Cited by 325 publications
(264 citation statements)
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References 144 publications
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“…Differences between cultivatable epi-and endophytic assemblages (Santamaria and Bayman 2005;Osono 2008;Flessa and Rambold 2013;Zambell and White 2015) indicate that only part of the epiphytic fungi invades the leaves. This supports the idea that plants actively filter invading fungi (Vacher et al 2016) and explain why plants growing at the same location harbour different microbiomes (Espinosa-Garcia and Langenheim 1990;Peršoh 2013). By the cultivation-independent approach we found that only rare and infrequent epiphytic fungi were restricted to the leaf surface, considering the whole extensive study area (Fig.…”
Section: Overlap Of Phyllosphere Mycobiomes and Fungal Litter Communisupporting
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Differences between cultivatable epi-and endophytic assemblages (Santamaria and Bayman 2005;Osono 2008;Flessa and Rambold 2013;Zambell and White 2015) indicate that only part of the epiphytic fungi invades the leaves. This supports the idea that plants actively filter invading fungi (Vacher et al 2016) and explain why plants growing at the same location harbour different microbiomes (Espinosa-Garcia and Langenheim 1990;Peršoh 2013). By the cultivation-independent approach we found that only rare and infrequent epiphytic fungi were restricted to the leaf surface, considering the whole extensive study area (Fig.…”
Section: Overlap Of Phyllosphere Mycobiomes and Fungal Litter Communisupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Litter therefore appears to be their primary habitat and their occurrence in living leaves just a transient stage. The manifold interactions of endophytic fungi with plant hosts (for reviews see Hyde and Soytong 2008;Porras-Alfaro and Bayman 2011;Debbab et al 2012;Hamilton et al 2012;Hardoim et al 2015;Berg et al 2016;Vacher et al 2016) are therefore probably mostly ascribable to fungal individuals and not to fungal communities.…”
Section: Overlap Of Phyllosphere Mycobiomes and Fungal Litter Communimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thinking of the leaf surface as a habitat for e.g. microbes, these small structures together with the trichomes form the landscape they encounter (Vacher et al, 2016].…”
Section: Atomic Force Microscopy (Afm)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The phyllosphere, the microbial community inhabiting the surface of plant leaves 1 , can play important positive roles for the plant partner. For example, disease resistance is increased when supportive bacteria are present 2,3 and increased host plant growth in the presence of specific community members has been documented 4-6 , along with a positive effect of overall increased microbial diversity 7 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%