Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 12
pro vyhledávání: '"William R. Rimington"'
Autor:
Katie J. Field, Silvia Pressel, Martin I. Bidartondo, Jeffrey G. Duckett, William R. Rimington
Publikováno v:
Mycorrhiza
An accurate understanding of the diversity and distribution of fungal symbioses in land plants is essential for mycorrhizal research. Here we update the seminal work of Wang and Qiu (Mycorrhiza 16:299-363, 2006) with a long-overdue focus on early-div
Autor:
Matthew E. Smith, Alison S. Jacob, Alessandro Desirò, Natalie Vande Pol, William R. Rimington, Martin I. Bidartondo, Gregory Bonito, James M. Trappe
Publikováno v:
IMA Fungus. 8:245-257
Endogonales is a lineage of early diverging fungi within Mucoromycota. Many species in this order produce small sporophores (“sporocarps”) containing a large number of zygospores, and many species form symbioses with plants. However, due to limit
Autor:
Anne D. Jungblut, Dawn Y. Sumner, William R. Rimington, Aime H. Rankin, Jeffrey G. Duckett, Harald Schneider, Tyler J. Mackey, Devin Castendyke, Ian Hawes, Silvia Pressel
Publikováno v:
Polar Biology. 40:2063-2076
Bryophytes from submerged habitats are particularly difficult to identify because developmental plasticity obscures their characteristic features. A deep-water moss population of uncertain identity was found isolated at a depth of 31 m within the per
Autor:
Silvia Pressel, Katie J. Field, Jeffrey G. Duckett, William R. Rimington, Martin I. Bidartondo
Publikováno v:
Mycorrhiza
Like the majority of land plants, liverworts regularly form intimate symbioses with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (Glomeromycotina). Recent phylogenetic and physiological studies report that they also form intimate symbioses with Mucoromycotina fungi
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::cce2cb5638807b94dd3972dcac4ad61a
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/161465/1/Rimington2019_Article_EvolutionAndNetworksInAncientA.pdf
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/161465/1/Rimington2019_Article_EvolutionAndNetworksInAncientA.pdf
Autor:
William R. Rimington, Jeffrey G. Duckett, Katie J. Field, Jill Kowal, Alison S. Jacob, Philipp Giesemann, Sebastian Schornack, Grace A. Hoysted, Silvia Pressel, Martin I. Bidartondo, Gerhard Gebauer
Fungi and plants have engaged in intimate symbioses that are globally widespread and have driven terrestrial biogeochemical processes since plant terrestrialisation >500 Mya. Recently, hitherto unknown nutritional mutualisms involving ancient lineage
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::9103d12b683e3573cff9e30debc88e39
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/148895/18/565.full.pdf
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/148895/18/565.full.pdf
Autor:
William R. Rimington, Martin I. Bidartondo, Silvia Pressel, Katie J. Field, Jeffrey G. Duckett
Publikováno v:
Journal of Systematics and Evolution. 54:666-678
Current understanding of the nature and function of fungal associations in pteridophytes is surprisingly patchy given their key evolutionary position, current research foci on other early-branching plant clades, and major efforts at unravelling mycor
Autor:
William R. Rimington, David J. Beerling, Katie J. Field, Duncan D. Cameron, Kate E. Allinson, S. Tille, Jonathan R. Leake, Martin I. Bidartondo
Publikováno v:
New Phytologist. 205:1492-1502
Mycorrhizal functioning in the fern Ophioglossum is complex and poorly understood. It is unknown whether mature O. vulgatum sporophytes form mutualistic associations with fungi of the Glomeromycota and with what specificity. Are green sporophytes abl
Autor:
Grace A, Hoysted, Jill, Kowal, Alison, Jacob, William R, Rimington, Jeffrey G, Duckett, Silvia, Pressel, Suzanne, Orchard, Megan H, Ryan, Katie J, Field, Martin I, Bidartondo
Publikováno v:
Current opinion in plant biology. 44
It has long been postulated that symbiotic fungi facilitated plant migrations onto land through enhancing the scavenging of mineral nutrients and exchanging these for photosynthetically fixed organic carbon. Today, land plant-fungal symbioses are bot
Autor:
Alessandro, Desirò, William R, Rimington, Alison, Jacob, Natalie Vande, Pol, Matthew E, Smith, James M, Trappe, Martin I, Bidartondo, Gregory, Bonito
Publikováno v:
IMA Fungus
Endogonales is a lineage of early diverging fungi within Mucoromycota. Many species in this order produce small sporophores (“sporocarps”) containing a large number of zygospores, and many species form symbioses with plants. However, due to limit
Publikováno v:
New Phytologist. 205:1394-1398