Authors
Alf Ekblad, Håkan Wallander, Douglas L Godbold, C Cruz, D Johnson, P Baldrian, RG Björk, Daniel Epron, B Kieliszewska-Rokicka, R Kjøller, Hojka Kraigher, Egbert Matzner, Jonny Neumann, Claude Plassard
Publication date
2013/5
Source
Plant and Soil
Volume
366
Pages
1-27
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
There is growing evidence of the importance of extramatrical mycelium (EMM) of mycorrhizal fungi in carbon (C) cycling in ecosystems. However, our understanding has until recently been mainly based on laboratory experiments, and knowledge of such basic parameters as variations in mycelial production, standing biomass and turnover as well as the regulatory mechanisms behind such variations in forest soils is limited. Presently, the production of EMM by ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi has been estimated at ~140 different forest sites to be up to several hundreds of kg per ha per year, but the published data are biased towards Picea abies in Scandinavia. Little is known about the standing biomass and turnover of EMM in other systems, and its influence on the C stored or lost from soils. Here, focussing on ectomycorrhizas, we discuss the factors that regulate the production and turnover of EMM and its role …
Total citations
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