4.7 Article

Plant-available P supply is not the main factor determining the benefit from arbuscular mycorrhiza to crop P nutrition and growth in contrasting cropping systems

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Editorial Material Agronomy

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi as (agro)ecosystem engineers

Duncan D. Cameron

PLANT AND SOIL (2010)

Article Agriculture, Multidisciplinary

Contribution of arbuscular mycorrhiza to soil quality in contrasting cropping systems

Helena Kahiluoto et al.

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT (2009)

Editorial Material Multidisciplinary Sciences

Environment: The disappearing nutrient

Natasha Gilbert

NATURE (2009)

Article Agriculture, Multidisciplinary

Soil organic matter and biological soil quality indicators after 21 years of organic and conventional farming

Andreas Fliessbach et al.

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT (2007)

Review Agriculture, Multidisciplinary

Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and organic farming

P Gosling et al.

AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT (2006)

Article Agronomy

Managing arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in cropping systems

C Plenchette et al.

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE (2005)

Article Plant Sciences

High functional diversity within species of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi

L Munkvold et al.

NEW PHYTOLOGIST (2004)

Article Agriculture, Multidisciplinary

Increasing mycorrhizal colonisation does not improve growth and nutrition of wheat on Vertosols in south-eastern Australia

MH Ryan et al.

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH (2002)

Article Agriculture, Multidisciplinary

Phosphorus controls the level of colonisation by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in conventional and biodynamic irrigated dairy pastures

MH Ryan et al.

AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURE (2000)