Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Science - Mycorrhizae
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-72 of 72    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Mycorrhizae:     more books (100)
  1. Mycorrhizae, impacts on production : June 1989 - January 1995 (SuDoc A 17.18/4:95-11) by Karl Schneider, 1995
  2. Morphoanatomical investigations of pine (Pinus silvestris L.) mycorrhizae in forest communities of the Białowie·za National Park =: Badania morfologiczno-anatomiczne ... leśnych Białowieskiego Parku Narodowego by Roman Pachlewski, 1967
  3. Mycorrhizae: Proceedings of the First North American Conference on Myc by Edward Hacskaylo,
  4. Phosphorus nutrition of banana as influenced by mycorrhizae and fertilizers ([Theses for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy / University of Hawaii) by Mu Lien Lin, 1987
  5. Mycorrhizae: Proceedings of the first North American Conference on Mycorrhizae, April 1969 (Miscellaneous publication / United States. Department of Agriculture)
  6. Additions to the literature of Mycorrhizae, 1938 by Arthur Pierson Kelley, 1938
  7. Bibliography on vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae, 1970-1982 by S. R Saif, 1983
  8. Investigations on the annual development dynamics of mycorrhizae in 40-year-old spruce stands =: Badania nad roczną dynamiką rozwoju mikoryz w 40-letnich drzewostanach świerkowych by Zenon Twarowski, 1967
  9. Mycorrhizae and nitrogen assimilation: With special reference to mountain pine (Pinus Mugo Turra) and Norway spruce (Picea Abies (L.) Karst) by Carl Marenus Möller, 1947
  10. Culture and re-introduction of vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizae in a prairie restoration: Final report by Dwayne Stenlund, 1994
  11. The effects of mycorrhizae on the growth of pinus caribaea seedlings in Tongan soils: Preliminary investigations (New Zealand Soil Bureau Scientific report) by J. P Widdowson, 1981
  12. The occurrence of Mycorrhizae;: Considered systematically, with special reference to the extent of our knowledge concerning them by Arthur Pierson Kelley, 1938
  13. Relation of Mycorrhizae to Connifer Seedlings.volume 44 # 4 by Richard E. McArdle, 1932-01-01
  14. Growth and nutrition of wheat as affected by interactions between VA mycorrhizae and plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR): Final report by J. J Germida, 1995

61. Effects Of Mycorrhizae On Growth And Demography Of Tallgrass Prairie Forbs -- Wi
The effects of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis on ramet and genet densities, vegetative growth rates, and flowering of three forb species were studied
http://www.amjbot.org/cgi/content/abstract/88/8/1452
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ... TABLE OF CONTENTS QUICK SEARCH: [advanced] Author:
Keyword(s):
Year: Vol: Page:
This Article Full Text Full Text (PDF) Submit a response ... Alert me if a correction is posted Services Email this article to a friend Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in ISI Web of Science Alert me to new issues of the journal ... Download to citation manager Citing Articles Citing Articles via HighWire Citing Articles via ISI Web of Science (9) Citing Articles via Google Scholar Google Scholar Articles by Wilson, G. W. T. Articles by Kobbeman, K. Search for Related Content PubMed Articles by Wilson, G. W. T. Articles by Kobbeman, K. Agricola Articles by Wilson, G. W. T. Articles by Kobbeman, K. American Journal of Botany.
Botanical Society of America, Inc.
Ecology
Effects of mycorrhizae on growth and demography of tallgrass prairie forbs
Gail W. T. Wilson David C. Hartnett Melinda D. Smith and Kerri Kobbeman Division of Biology, Ackert Hall, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-5502 USA Department of Plant Pathology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0036 USA

62. Dr. Susan Kaminskyj: Mycorrhizae Research
This project will study plant rootfungal interactions called mycorrhizae in the Canadian Arctic. Mycorrhizal fungi are commensal partners with the roots of
http://www.usask.ca/biology/kaminskyj/arctic.html
Biology: Kaminskyj Lab
Home Cell Biology Research Mycorrhizae Research
Collaborations Opportunities Links
Publications ... Contact
Mycorrhizae Research
Current Projects Completed Projects This project will study plant root:fungal interactions called mycorrhizae in the Canadian Arctic. Mycorrhizal fungi are commensal partners with the roots of most land plants, trading water and minerals for nutrients like sugars. In temperate regions, mycorrhizal interactions increase plant vigor and disease resistance. In forests, mycorrhizae have been shown to mediate nutrient transfer from established trees to seedlings, including between species, promoting community stability. Mycorrhizal activities are likely to be of even greater importance in arctic ecosystems where plant growth is limited by coldness, aridity, and low nutrient soils. Although the identity, distribution, and roles of mycorrhizae are of considerable interest, research is limited by access difficulties, so there are relatively few studies compared to temperate/tropical systems. This project is in collaboration with the well-established arctic research of Dr. Jim Basinger

63. Mycorrhizae : Definition
Definition of mycorrhizae. Search for mycorrhizae in these other databases too. Glossary word, Glossary - def, Textbooks, Protocols, Images, Tools
http://www.everythingbio.com/glos/definition.php?word=Mycorrhizae

64. Mycorrhiza Literature Exchange, Plant Sciences, University Of Tennessee
Welcome to a global clearinghouse for mycorrhizal literature.
http://mycorrhiza.ag.utk.edu/
var site="sm4mycor" Directory News Article abstracts Water relations bibliography ... Links
last update: December 2007
last update: 14 October 2007
Search tool notice : the search tool hasn't worked on this site for several months. Now it is fixed. Give it a try! For instance, a search of cadmium now returns ~102 hits. A search of "Lactarius deliciosus", 28 hits.
08 May 2007 Search tips
The MIE has become the MLE: Mycorrhiza Literature Exchange . I will continue to post monthly literature updates , and as I become aware of them, mycorrhizal books reviews theses and dissertations (if you send
me citations for these, I will be happy to post them). I will also continue a mycorrhizal water relations
bibliography
On 6 April 2006, I transferred the the International Directory of Mycorrhizologists
the IMS . You can now send your directory information to the IMS organizational committee:
idm@mycorrhizas.org
New URL for the International Directory of Mycorrhizologists (IDM): http://idm.mycorrhizas.org
The MLE is hosted by Department of Plant Sciences Tennessee Agricultural Experiment Station University of Tennessee Home ... Contact

65. PHC PLC Landing Page | Plant Health Care
Supplier of natural fertilizers, and products containing mycorrhizal fungi and beneficial bacteria. Company profile and news, and product brochures.
http://www.planthealthcare.com/
@import "/files/css/0c40dffcda21a0e95e1495e937468dbf.css"; Plant Health Care U.S.
Plant Health Care's website

in the United States.
PHC Subsidiaries
Plant Health Care has products
and services around the world.
Select a country or region PHC Mexico PHC UK PHC Iberia PHC Netherlands PHC Reclamation PHC Myconate PHC U.S. Ag The Plant Health Care Group is a leading provider of naturally-based products for agriculture, commercial landscaping and land reclamation industries. Our innovative line of products creates both environmental and economic benefits for our customers and capitalizes upon long-term trends towards natural systems and biological solutions to promote plant health and growth.
Plant Health Care has a global reach through operating subsidiaries and supply and distribution agreements with major agrichemical and green industry partners.
Investors

66. Mycrorrhizae Part 1
Photographs of a number of fungal species which associate with plants to their mutual benefit.
http://plantbio.berkeley.edu/~bruns/tour/fungi2.html
Mycorrhizal Fungi
Thelephoroid#2 mycorrhizae Rhizopogon bishop pine mycorrhizae Russula amoenolens mycorrhiza one of the most common associates of bishop pine Thelephoroid #2 ectomycorrhizae ectomycorrhizae of bishop pine another Thelephoroid ectomycorrhizae on Douglas-fir double colonization by Tomentella sublilicina and Thelephoroid#2 on Douglas-fir Russula amoenolens mycorrhizae bishop pine root mycorrhizae on bishop pine (left) and douglas fir (right) showing 3 different mycorrhizal morphotypes in close proximity: Rhizopogon (white), Thelephoroid#2 (dark brown) and Russula amoenolens (yellow). of an unknown boletoid fungus on bishop pine Thelephoroid mycorrhiza Suillus pungens mycorrhizae Cenoccocum mycorrhizae infecting an orchid; not an ectomycorrhizae generally mycorrhizae of this species are very hard to find (black) with an unknown mycorrhizae on the same root
Pterospora mycorrhizae
The tour continues with some additional photos of mycorrhizal fungi (part 2). the beginning sample results point reyes fire introduction limantour road disturbance plots bp plots species diversity plots construction post fire - sd plots post fire - bp plots sierra nevada 1995 sierra july 1998 sierra august 1999 sierra fowm 2000 santa rosa island 2001 blodgett 2002 tomales point 2004 blodgett 2004 mclaughlin 2006 mushrooms mycorrhizae part I mycorrhizae part II rust fungi post fire fungi Bruns Lab home Last updated: Friday April 7, 2000

67. ICOM2.index
The Second International Conference on Mycorrhiza was held in Uppsala, Sweden, 510 July 1998. The meeting was organised by a local organising committee
http://www-icom2.slu.se/
ICOM II
2nd International Conference on Mycorrhiza
Uppsala, SWEDEN, 5-10 July 1998
The Second International Conference on Mycorrhiza was held in Uppsala, Sweden, 5-10 July 1998. The meeting was organised by a local organising committee based at the Department of Forest Mycology and Pathology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Uppsala, Sweden. The meeting covered different aspects of mycorrhizal symbiosis and their role in a wide range of areas from ecosystem dynamics and nutrient cycling to cellular interactions, gene expression and metabolic regulation. Following the Uppsala meeting this web site will kept open and developed to include information of interest to mycorrhiza researchers.
ICOM - 3, Australia 2001
Abstract book and participant list
International Directory of Mycorrhiza Researchers
Important dates ...
Roger.Finlay@mykopat.slu.se and Eric Danell
Department of Forest Mycology and Pathology,

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.

and Christer Wilhelmsson

68. Mycorrhizal Research At U.W.I.
My interest in VA mycorrhizal fungi began after I enrolled as a postgraduate at Cave Hill. I was and, still am to an extent, amazed by the prevalence of
http://users.sunbeach.net/users/lec/mycrg.html
The University of The West Indies
Mycorrhiza Research Group
Site under construction The group was formed as a collaboration between Louis Chinnery (Crop Ecologist) and Richard Dales (Fungal and Molecular Geneticist). The group has a wide interest in mycorrhizas especially (Vesicular)-Arbuscular Mycorrhizas
Dr Louis Chinnery
B.Sc., D.Phil. (New University of Ulster, U.K.)
Senior Lecturer in Biology Louis Chinnery has had a long time interest in mycorrhizas dating back to his undergraduate days at the then New University of Ulster. This interest was revived when he was asked to join a team conducting a USAID funded project on Citrus mycorrhizas in the Eastern Caribbean. Through this project he gained training at INVAM, then at the University of Florida, and Dr. Stan Nemec's lab, USDA, Orlando. His main interests are in the use of VAM in sustainable agriculture A course taught - Crop Ecology
Dr Richard Dales
B.Sc. (Central London Polytechnic), Ph.D. (Birmingham)
Senior Lecturer in Biology Richard Dales left the University of the West Indies at the end of January 1997.

69. Mycorrhizal Products - Our Company
Our goal is to educate how important it is to reintroduce beneficial organisms back into the soil. By disturbing the ground, we destroy the natural web of
http://www.mycorrhizalproducts.com/

Signup
Login Mothers Nature's Website
Mycorrhizae
Mycorrhizal Products.com TM is a company dedicated to providing the highest quality and most diverse Mycorrhizal Products available on this planet. Our Mycorrhizal Products are 100% natural and freshly harvested so as to enable you to achieve the best results possible. We offer the world's finest and most diverse mycorrhizal species for use in all applications, ranging from your home gardening and landscape, to commercial applications. Mycorrhizal Products.com TM are also available for community landscaping golf courses, commercial farming, nursery farms and all other growers. We offer several types of Mycorrhizal Products.com TM for use with various application techniques, these include tablets, granular, powder and liquid forms. If a custom blend is required, we offer Mycorrhizal Quality custom blending. (Click here for a list of our different species)
The Mycorrhizal relationship with plants is over 400 million years old and is one of the longest and most successful relationships in nature. There are
over 50,000 research studies on the Mycorrhizal relationship. The Mycorrhizal fungi excrete powerful chemicals that dissolve mineral nutrients, absorb water, retard soil pathogens, and glue soil particles together into a porous structure. In return, the Mycorrhizae fungus receives sugar and other compounds from plants to fuel Mycorrhizal activities. Both plant and fungus benefit from the "symbiotic relationship". Research has documented improved plant nutrient and water uptake, plus resistance to a wide range of soil diseases and environmental extremes. Plants establish fruit and flower more abundantly; areas thrive with less irrigation, fertilizer, and pesticides. The Mycorrhizal network is nature's original World Wide Web.

70. Plant Revolution - Premium Mycorrhizal Fungi
Come see the Amazing Growth your plants will experience with our Plant Success Mycorrhizal products.
http://www.plantrevolution.com/
2133 S. Hathaway St.
Santa Ana, CA 92705
Information
Glossary Products Purchase ... Contact Home

71. Monotropa Uniflora Plants Of Eastern Massachusetts Form Mycorrhizae With A Diver
Plant species in the subfamily Monotropoideae are mycoheterotrophs; they obtain fixed carbon from photosynthetic plants via a shared mycorrhizal network.
http://www.mycologia.org/cgi/content/abstract/98/4/535

HOME
HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ... TABLE OF CONTENTS This Article Full Text Full Text (PDF) Services Similar articles in this journal Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager Citing Articles Citing Articles via Google Scholar Google Scholar Articles by Yang, S. Articles by Pfister, D.H. Search for Related Content PubMed Articles by Yang, S. Articles by Pfister, D.H. Agricola Articles by Yang, S. Articles by Pfister, D.H. Mycologia , 98(4), 2006, pp. 535-540.
The Mycological Society of America
Monotropa uniflora plants of eastern Massachusetts form mycorrhizae with a diversity of russulacean fungi
S. Yang
D.H. Pfister Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
Plant species in the subfamily Monotropoideae are mycoheterotrophs; they obtain fixed carbon from photosynthetic plants via a shared mycorrhizal network. Previous findings show mycoheterotrophic plants exhibit a high level of specificity to their mycorrhizal fungi. In this study we explore the association of mycorrhizal

72. Dr. R. Larry Peterson, Faculty Profile: Research, Department Of Botany, Universi
s of current research projects at the Department of Botany, University of Guelph, Ontario, Canada.......
http://www.uoguelph.ca/botany/people/faculty/peterson/research.html
Dr. R. Larry Peterson
University Professor Emeritus- lpeterso@uoguelph.ca Welcome Message Contact Us Site Index ... Publications As of May 1, 2005, the Department of Botany will cease to exist. Please refer to the College of Biological Science pages. Research Root Biology and Mycorrhiza Research Group My research involves the interaction between fungi and plants, with an emphasis on mutualistic symbioses (mycorrhizas). I am particularly interested in cellular and subcellular changes that occur in both symbionts as various associations develop. My goal is to understand how fungi are able to attach and enter plant roots and how they change the structure of plant cells. This knowledge will help us to increase the productivity of many crop plants and forestry species that benefit from mycorrhizal fungi for nutrient uptake and protection from pathogens. Some of the research projects currently underway in my Root Biology and Mycorrhiza Research Group are described briefly below.
  • Effect of mycorrhizal fungal hyphae on the cytoskeleton and other cellular constituents of plant cells (Dr. Larry Peterson, and Dr. Yukari Kuga).
  • A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 4     61-72 of 72    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4 

    free hit counter