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Budgeting for the wood-wide web

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2000

Robin Sen
Affiliation:
Department of Biosciences, Division of General Microbiology, PO Box 56 (Viikinkaari 9), FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland (tel +358 9 70859221; fax +358 9 70859262; e-mail [email protected])
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Abstract

How appropriate that at the turn of a century that has overseen a second industrial revolution in agriculture, there is an increasing appreciation of the central role played by the mycorrhizal symbiosis, first described in the latter part of the nineteenth century (Frank, 1885). Simply stated, nearly all families of plants form root symbiotic organs, termed mycorrhizas, with soil fungi belonging to all the main phyla, namely Zygomycotina, Ascomycotina, Basidiomycotina and the Fungi Imperfecti (Harley & Harley, 1987). The importance of this symbiosis in controlling plant nutrient status and growth is well established (Smith & Read, 1997), but a report in this issue now provides, long awaited, nitrogen and phosphorus budgets for mycorrhizal trees (Perez-Moreno & Read, pp. 301–309).

Type
Forum: Commentary
Copyright
© Trustees of the New Phytologist 2000

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