4.7 Article

Soil Sickness in Aged Tea Plantation Is Associated With a Shift in Microbial Communities as a Result of Plant Polyphenol Accumulation in the Tea Gardens

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Spatial Distribution Patterns of Root-Associated Bacterial Communities Mediated by Root Exudates in Different Aged Ratooning Tea Monoculture Systems

Yasir Arafat et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES (2017)

Letter Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

A discussion on Tea and human health: biomedical functions of tea active components and current issues

Sheng-rong Shen et al.

JOURNAL OF ZHEJIANG UNIVERSITY-SCIENCE B (2015)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Structure, variation, and assembly of the root-associated microbiomes of rice

Joseph Edwards et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2015)

Review Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

The Regulation by Phenolic Compounds of Soil Organic Matter Dynamics under a Changing Environment

Kyungjin Min et al.

BIOMED RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL (2015)

Article Plant Sciences

Are plant-soil feedback responses explained by plant traits?

Catherine Baxendale et al.

NEW PHYTOLOGIST (2014)

Article Microbiology

Metaproteomic analysis of ratoon sugarcane rhizospheric soil

Wenxiong Lin et al.

BMC MICROBIOLOGY (2013)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Evidence Does not Support a Role for Gallic Acid in Phragmites australis Invasion Success

Jeffrey D. Weidenhamer et al.

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2013)

Review Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Plant-Soil Feedbacks and Soil Sickness: From Mechanisms to Application in Agriculture

Li-Feng Huang et al.

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2013)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Towards a unified paradigm for sequence-based identification of fungi

Urmas Koljalg et al.

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY (2013)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

Quality-filtering vastly improves diversity estimates from Illumina amplicon sequencing

Nicholas A. Bokulich et al.

NATURE METHODS (2013)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

UPARSE: highly accurate OTU sequences from microbial amplicon reads

Robert C. Edgar

NATURE METHODS (2013)

Article Ecology

Can the negative plant-soil feedback of Jacobaea vulgaris be explained by autotoxicity?

Tess F. J. van de Voorde et al.

BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY (2012)

Review Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Microbes as Targets and Mediators of Allelopathy in Plants

Don Cipollini et al.

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ECOLOGY (2012)

Review Plant Sciences

The rhizosphere microbiome and plant health

Roeland L. Berendsen et al.

TRENDS IN PLANT SCIENCE (2012)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

UCHIME improves sensitivity and speed of chimera detection

Robert C. Edgar et al.

BIOINFORMATICS (2011)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

FLASH: fast length adjustment of short reads to improve genome assemblies

Tanja Magoc et al.

BIOINFORMATICS (2011)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Chimeric 16S rRNA sequence formation and detection in Sanger and 454-pyrosequenced PCR amplicons

Brian J. Haas et al.

GENOME RESEARCH (2011)

Letter Biochemical Research Methods

QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing data

J. Gregory Caporaso et al.

NATURE METHODS (2010)

Review Ecology

Rooting theories of plant community ecology in microbial interactions

James D. Bever et al.

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2010)

Article Soil Science

Soil Microbial Communities and Function in Alternative Systems to Continuous Cotton

V. Acosta-Martinez et al.

SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL (2010)

Article Soil Science

An improved method to evaluate the o-diphenol oxidase activity of soil

P Perucci et al.

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY (2000)

Review Ecology

The role of polyphenols in terrestrial ecosystem nutrient cycling

S Hättenschwiler et al.

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2000)