Urbanization erodes ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity and may cause microbial communities to converge.

scientific article published on 10 April 2017

Urbanization erodes ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity and may cause microbial communities to converge. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1038/S41559-017-0123
P698PubMed publication ID28812698

P50authorKatalin SzlaveczQ27667601
Heikki SetäläQ51724900
Elisabeth HornungQ56441123
Richard V. PouyatQ104517026
Ian YesilonisQ114967602
Stephanie A YarwoodQ114967605
Miklós DombosQ114967606
Dietrich J Epp SchmidtQ114967616
Sarel CilliersQ114967632
P2093author name stringD Johan Kotze
P2860cites workLateral gene transfer and the nature of bacterial innovationQ22122396
Biodiversity hotspots for conservation prioritiesQ22122401
Patterns and processes of microbial community assemblyQ24604557
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Catastrophic shifts in ecosystemsQ29617557
Determinants of the distribution of nitrogen-cycling microbial communities at the landscape scaleQ30395510
Global effects of land use on local terrestrial biodiversityQ31042382
Distance-based tests for homogeneity of multivariate dispersionsQ33236727
The influence of soil pH on the diversity, abundance and transcriptional activity of ammonia oxidizing archaea and bacteriaQ33360625
Quercus rubra-associated ectomycorrhizal fungal communities of disturbed urban sites and mature forests.Q33810349
Assessment of soil microbial community structure by use of taxon-specific quantitative PCR assaysQ33884721
Towards global patterns in the diversity and community structure of ectomycorrhizal fungiQ34262294
Beyond biogeographic patterns: processes shaping the microbial landscape.Q34266945
Continental-scale distributions of dust-associated bacteria and fungi.Q34473185
Urban stress is associated with variation in microbial species composition-but not richness-in ManhattanQ35783431
Global patterns in belowground communities.Q37578666
Microbial rRNA:rDNA gene ratios may be unexpectedly low due to extracellular DNA preservation in soilsQ38974552
Ammonia concentration determines differential growth of ammonia-oxidising archaea and bacteria in soil microcosmsQ42790576
Biotic homogenization: a few winners replacing many losers in the next mass extinctionQ45241136
Ectomycorrhizal fungi slow soil carbon cyclingQ46528582
The UNITE database for molecular identification of fungi--recent updates and future perspectivesQ48065164
Biogeographic patterns in below-ground diversity in New York City's Central Park are similar to those observed globally.Q51404964
Soil bacterial and fungal communities across a pH gradient in an arable soil.Q51631348
Role of mutator alleles in adaptive evolution.Q54564129
The ‘few winners and many losers’ paradigm revisited: Emerging prospects for tropical forest biodiversityQ56543412
Urbanization as a major cause of biotic homogenizationQ56781794
Putting people in the map: anthropogenic biomes of the worldQ56864607
On defining and quantifying biotic homogenizationQ56925002
Species divergence and trait convergence in experimental plant community assemblyQ56997089
Reaction- and sample-specific inhibition affect standardization of qPCR assays of soil bacterial communitiesQ57014511
Ecological homogenization of urban USAQ57068924
Fungal but not bacterial soil communities recover after termination of decadal nitrogen additions to boreal forestQ57236730
A Global Comparison of Surface Soil Characteristics Across Five CitiesQ57247932
Global patterns of stream detritivore distribution: implications for biodiversity loss in changing climatesQ58638825
Feeding and housing the urban population: Environmental impacts at the peri-urban interface under different land-use scenariosQ58815603
P433issue5
P921main subjecturbanizationQ161078
EctomycorrhizaQ3047120
fungal diversityQ100146677
P304page(s)123
P577publication date2017-04-10
P1433published inNature Ecology and EvolutionQ39049712
P1476titleUrbanization erodes ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity and may cause microbial communities to converge.
P478volume1

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q57466303Climate differentiates forest structure across a residential macrosystem
Q60324766Ecological homogenization of residential macrosystems
Q46296740Ectomycorrhizal Fungal Communities in Urban Parks Are Similar to Those in Natural Forests but Shaped by Vegetation and Park Age.
Q98222246Fungal communities decline with urbanization-more in air than in soil
Q64100815Open-source data reveal how collections-based fungal diversity is sensitive to global change
Q89965298Predicting Microbiome Function Across Space Is Confounded by Strain-Level Differences and Functional Redundancy Across Taxa
Q90887811Seagrass-associated fungal communities show distance decay of similarity that has implications for seagrass management and restoration
Q84651541Taxonomic and Functional Response of Millipedes (Diplopoda) to Urban Soil Disturbance in a Metropolitan Area

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