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Ethan Cox content/uploads/2010/08/mycorrhiza.jpg.

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Presentation on theme: "Ethan Cox content/uploads/2010/08/mycorrhiza.jpg."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ethan Cox http://sdhydroponics.com/resources/wp- content/uploads/2010/08/mycorrhiza.jpg

2  Symbiotic fungi  Binds with plant’s roots http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mycorrhizal _root_tips_%28amanita%29.jpg

3  Two Types  Ectomycorrhizae  Endomycorrhizae http://plantbio.berkeley.edu/~bruns/picts/m ycorrhizae/46.jpg

4  Do we need mycorrhizae restoration?  Hmmm….yes and no.  What is mycorrhizae restoration?

5  Olympic Peninsula in Washington state  Mount St. Helens Example  Prairie Restoration in the American Midwest

6  Iceland Sand Dunes  Minnesotan Taconite Mining Area  China and Arsenic

7  What are the similarities between sites?  Extremely degraded sites  Mycorrhizae helped scavenge the few nutrients  Should be determined on a case by case basis

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9  Allen, Michael F. The Ecology of Mycorrhizae. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1991. Print.  Allen, M. F., C. M. Crisafulli, S. J. Morris, L. M. Egerton-Warburton, J. A. MacMahon, and J. M. Trappe. 2005. Mycorrhizae and Mount St. Helens: story of a symbiosis. “Ecological responses to the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.” V. H. Dale, F. J. Swanson, and C. M. Crisafulli, editors. Springer Science + Business Media, Inc, New York.  Dong, Yan, Yong-Guan Zhu, F. Andrew Smith, Youshan Wang, and Baodong Chen. "Arbuscular Mycorrhiza Enhanced Aresnic Resistance of Both White Clover (Trifolium Repens Linn.) and Ryegrass (Lolium Perenne L.) Plants in an Aresnic Contaminated Soil." Environmental Pollution 155 (2008): 174-81. Science Direct. Web. 12 Apr. 2011.  Greipsson, S., and H. El-Mayas. 2000. “Arbuscular mycorrhizae of Leymus arenarius on coastal sands and reclamation sites in Iceland and response to inoculation.” Restoration Ecology 8: 144-150. Web of Science. Web. 9 Apr. 2011.  Harley, J. L., and S. E. Smith. Mycorrhizal Symbiosis. London: Academic, 1983. Print.  Hilderbrand, R. H., A. C. Watts, and A. M. Randle. 2005. The myths of restoration ecology. Ecology and Society 10(1): 19. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol10/iss1/art19/  Johnson, NC. 1998. “Responses of Salsola kali and Panicum virgatum to mycorrhizal fungi, phosphorus, and soil organic matter: implications for reclamation.” Journal of Applied Ecology 35: 86-94. Web of Science. Web. 9 Apr. 2011  Noyd, Robert K., F. L. Pfleger, and M. P. Russelle. "Interactions between Native Prairie Grasses and Indigenous Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi: Implications for Reclamation of Taconite Iron Ore Tailing." New Phytologist 129.4 (1995): 651-60. ISI Web of Knowledge. Web. 14 Apr. 2011.  Requena, N., E. Perez-Solis, C. Azcon-Aguilar, P. Jeffries, and J.-M. Barea. "Management of Indigenous Plant-Microbe Symbioses Aids Restoration of Desertified Ecosystems." Applied and Environmental Microbiology 67.2 (2001): 495-98. Web of Science. Web. 11 Apr. 2011.  Richter, Brantlee Spakes, and Jean C. Stutz. "Mycorrhizal Inoculation of Big Sacaton: Implications for Grassland Restoration of an Abandoned Agricultural Fields." Restoration Ecology 10.4 (2002): 607-16. Web of Science. Web. 12 Apr. 2011.  Smith, M. R., I. Charvat, and R. L. Jacobson. 1998. “Arbuscular mycorrhizae promote establishment of prairie species in a tallgrass prairie restoration.” Canadian Journal of Botany. 76: 1947-1954. Web of Science. Web. 10 Apr. 2011.


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