Ectomycorrhizal-Dominated Boreal and Tropical Forests Have Distinct Fungal Communities, but Analogous Spatial Patterns across Soil Horizons Journal Article
Overview
publication date
- July 9, 2013
has subject area
- Alaska
- Biological Phenomena - Phylogeny
- DNA, Fungal
- Ecological and Environmental Phenomena - Biodiversity
- Ecological and Environmental Phenomena - Climate
- Ecological and Environmental Phenomena - Ecosystem
- Environment and Public Health - Biodiversity
- Environment and Public Health - Climate
- Environment and Public Health - Ecosystem
- Environment and Public Health - Soil Microbiology
- Environment and Public Health - Spatial Analysis
- Fungal Structures - Mycorrhizae
- Fungi
- Fungi - Mycorrhizae
- Genetic Phenomena - Phylogeny
- Health Care Evaluation Mechanisms - Spatial Analysis
- Information Science - Phylogeny
- Investigative Techniques - Spatial Analysis
- Microbiology - Soil Microbiology
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Organism Forms - Mycorrhizae
- Plant Roots - Mycorrhizae
- Trees
has restriction
- gold
Date in CU Experts
- September 9, 2013 10:06 AM
Full Author List
- McGuire KL; Allison SD; Fierer N; Treseder KK
author count
- 4
citation count
- 63
published in
- PLoS One Journal
Other Profiles
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 1932-6203
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Additional Document Info
volume
- 8
issue
- 7
number
- ARTN e68278