scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1038/S41559-017-0123 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 28812698 |
P50 | author | Katalin Szlavecz | Q27667601 |
Heikki Setälä | Q51724900 | ||
Elisabeth Hornung | Q56441123 | ||
Richard V. Pouyat | Q104517026 | ||
Ian Yesilonis | Q114967602 | ||
Stephanie A Yarwood | Q114967605 | ||
Miklós Dombos | Q114967606 | ||
Dietrich J Epp Schmidt | Q114967616 | ||
Sarel Cilliers | Q114967632 | ||
P2093 | author name string | D Johan Kotze | |
P2860 | cites work | Lateral gene transfer and the nature of bacterial innovation | Q22122396 |
Biodiversity hotspots for conservation priorities | Q22122401 | ||
Patterns and processes of microbial community assembly | Q24604557 | ||
Greengenes, a chimera-checked 16S rRNA gene database and workbench compatible with ARB | Q29547254 | ||
Search and clustering orders of magnitude faster than BLAST | Q29547431 | ||
Naive Bayesian classifier for rapid assignment of rRNA sequences into the new bacterial taxonomy | Q29547619 | ||
Ultra-high-throughput microbial community analysis on the Illumina HiSeq and MiSeq platforms | Q29614454 | ||
Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems | Q29617557 | ||
Determinants of the distribution of nitrogen-cycling microbial communities at the landscape scale | Q30395510 | ||
Global effects of land use on local terrestrial biodiversity | Q31042382 | ||
Distance-based tests for homogeneity of multivariate dispersions | Q33236727 | ||
The influence of soil pH on the diversity, abundance and transcriptional activity of ammonia oxidizing archaea and bacteria | Q33360625 | ||
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 assays | Q33884721 | ||
Towards global patterns in the diversity and community structure of ectomycorrhizal fungi | Q34262294 | ||
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 Manhattan | Q35783431 | ||
Global patterns in belowground communities. | Q37578666 | ||
Microbial rRNA:rDNA gene ratios may be unexpectedly low due to extracellular DNA preservation in soils | Q38974552 | ||
Ammonia concentration determines differential growth of ammonia-oxidising archaea and bacteria in soil microcosms | Q42790576 | ||
Biotic homogenization: a few winners replacing many losers in the next mass extinction | Q45241136 | ||
Ectomycorrhizal fungi slow soil carbon cycling | Q46528582 | ||
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Biogeographic patterns in below-ground diversity in New York City's Central Park are similar to those observed globally. | Q51404964 | ||
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Role of mutator alleles in adaptive evolution. | Q54564129 | ||
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Putting people in the map: anthropogenic biomes of the world | Q56864607 | ||
On defining and quantifying biotic homogenization | Q56925002 | ||
Species divergence and trait convergence in experimental plant community assembly | Q56997089 | ||
Reaction- and sample-specific inhibition affect standardization of qPCR assays of soil bacterial communities | Q57014511 | ||
Ecological homogenization of urban USA | Q57068924 | ||
Fungal but not bacterial soil communities recover after termination of decadal nitrogen additions to boreal forest | Q57236730 | ||
A Global Comparison of Surface Soil Characteristics Across Five Cities | Q57247932 | ||
Global patterns of stream detritivore distribution: implications for biodiversity loss in changing climates | Q58638825 | ||
Feeding and housing the urban population: Environmental impacts at the peri-urban interface under different land-use scenarios | Q58815603 | ||
P433 | issue | 5 | |
P921 | main subject | urbanization | Q161078 |
Ectomycorrhiza | Q3047120 | ||
fungal diversity | Q100146677 | ||
P304 | page(s) | 123 | |
P577 | publication date | 2017-04-10 | |
P1433 | published in | Nature Ecology and Evolution | Q39049712 |
P1476 | title | Urbanization erodes ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity and may cause microbial communities to converge. | |
P478 | volume | 1 |
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Q98222246 | Fungal communities decline with urbanization-more in air than in soil |
Q64100815 | Open-source data reveal how collections-based fungal diversity is sensitive to global change |
Q89965298 | Predicting Microbiome Function Across Space Is Confounded by Strain-Level Differences and Functional Redundancy Across Taxa |
Q90887811 | Seagrass-associated fungal communities show distance decay of similarity that has implications for seagrass management and restoration |
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