• Forest Floor Narrative
  • Products
  • About
  • Search
  • Contact
Menu

Forest floor narrative

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
The world of ecology, from the forest floor.

Your Custom Text Here

Forest floor narrative

  • Forest Floor Narrative
  • Products
  • About
  • Search
  • Contact
New blog front 1000.jpg

Your path towards ecological understanding

Plant kin recognition and mycorrhizae

September 7, 2017 Philip Pinzone
Stained AMF structures. Procedures I carried out throughout my masters thesis. 

Stained AMF structures. Procedures I carried out throughout my masters thesis. 

New research shows that some plants can recognize if their neighbor is closely related. Because of kin recognition in young plants of common ragweed, closely related neighbors do better by investing more in mycorrhizae. Although mycorrhizae didn't nutritionally benefit these plants, their fungal mutualist offered another type of fitness enhancing reward. 

Read more
In Ecology, Mutualism, Mycology, Evolution Tags Forest Floor Narrative, FFN, forest floor, Forest ecology, forest, plant recognition, recognition, mycorrhizae, Mycology, Biology, Botany, nature, species interactions, mutualism, Ecology, Ecological insights, ecosystems, ecosystem health, species distributions, AMF, research, science, Hyphae, kin, root colonization, Fungi, Fungus, plant interactions, fungal interactions, Mycorrhizal functioning

1300 Elmwood Ave, Buffalo, NY 14222