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Since time immemorial, plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi have coexisted in a mutually beneficial relationship. The ...
Industrial farming practices often deplete the soil of important nutrients and minerals, leaving farmers to rely on ...
If you're walking outdoors, chances are something remarkable is happening under your feet. Vast fungal networks are silently working to keep ecosystems alive.
Scientists use small peptides to enhance symbiosis between plants and fungi, offering a sustainable alternative to artificial fertilizers. Plant biologists discover new plant molecule, CLE16, as well ...
New Age Farming LLC unveils a new organic blend of soil microbes designed to significantly expand root systems and improve plant health, offering gardeners a natural solution for larger, healthier ...
E. Williams. 2002. Beneficial mycorrhizas associated with commercial cotton and native Hibiscus species growing in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia. 8th ICPP alsrai, A., R. Baatar, and S. E ...
Duell, Geoffrey House, Gail WT Wilson, Peggy A. Schultz, and James D. Bever. 2022. Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi Taxa Show Variable Patterns of Micro-Scale Dispersal in Prairie Restorations. Frontiers ...
These fungi aren't what you might picture. They are not mushrooms, or brightly coloured growths on tree trunks. Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi look like spools of thread wrapped around plant roots.