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The significance of mycorrhizas for protective ecosystems

  • Multi-Author Review
  • Structure, Function and Ecology of the Mycorrhizal Symbiosis
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Summary

On the basis of the reviews presented in this issue, the ecological significance of mycorrhizal symbioses is discussed. Mycorrhizas may have some importance in the acquisition of mineral nutrients during the productive phase of ecosystems in early stages of succession, but their main role is played during the protective phase of ecosystems in the final stages of succession when most resources are incorporated into biomass. In these successional stages, mycorrhizas short-circuit nutrient cycles by directly reacquiring nutrients in organic form from plant (and fungal) litter, and they may reallocate resources between different plant individuals, preventing loss of resources from the entire ecosystem.

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Pankow, W., Boller, T. & Wiemken, A. The significance of mycorrhizas for protective ecosystems. Experientia 47, 391–394 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01972081

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