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1. Differential Response of Mycorrhizal Plants to Tomato bushy stunt virus and Tomato mosaic virus Infection

2. Author Correction: Evolutionary history of plant hosts and fungal symbionts predicts the strength of mycorrhizal mutualism

3. Acquisition and evolution of enhanced mutualism—an underappreciated mechanism for invasive success?

4. Globally, plant-soil feedbacks are weak predictors of plant abundance

5. Strong host-specific selection and over-dominance characterize arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal root colonizers of coastal sand dune plants of the Mediterranean region

6. Resistance of soil biota and plant growth to disturbance increases with plant diversity

8. Misdiagnosis and uncritical use of plant mycorrhizal data are not the only elephants in the room

9. Erratum for the Report 'Worldwide evidence of a unimodal relationship between productivity and plant species richness,' by Lauchlan H. Fraser, J. Pither, A. Jentsch, M. Sternberg, M. Zobel, D. Askarizadeh, S. Bartha, C. Beierkuhnlein, J. A. Bennett, A. Bittel, B. Boldgiv, I. I. Boldrini, E. Bork, L. Brown, M. Cabido, J. Cahill, C. N. Carlyle, G. Campetella, S. Chelli, O. Cohen, A.-M. Csergo, S. Díaz, L. Enrico, D. Ensing, A. Fidelis, J. D. Fridley, B. Foster, H. Garris, J. R. Goheen, H. A. L. Henry, M. Hohn, M. H. Jouri, J. Klironomos, K. Koorem, R. Lawrence-Lodge, R. Long, P. Manning, R. Mitchell, M. Moora, S. C. Müller, C. Nabinger, K. Naseri, G. E. Overbeck, T. M. Palmer, S. Parsons, M. Pesek, V. D. Pillar, R. M. Pringle, K. Roccaforte, A. Schmidt, Z. Shang, R. Stahlmann, G. C. Stotz, S. Sugiyama, S. Szentes, D. Thompson, R. Tungalag, S. Undrakhbold, M. van Rooyen, C. Wellstein, J. B. Wilson, T. Zupo

10. Research on mycorrhizas: trends in the past 40 years as expressed in the 'MYCOLIT' database

11. The effects of arbuscular mycorrhizas on soil aggregation depend on the interaction between plant and fungal species

12. Phylogenetic and trait-based assembly of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities.

13. Evolutionary history of plant hosts and fungal symbionts predicts the strength of mycorrhizal mutualism

14. Using mock communities of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi to evaluate fidelity associated with Illumina sequencing

15. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi as mediators of ecosystem responses to nitrogen deposition: A trait‐based predictive framework

16. Relative importance of competition and plant–soil feedback, their synergy, context dependency and implications for coexistence

17. Does responsiveness to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi depend on plant invasive status?

18. Plant response to biochar, compost, and mycorrhizal fungal amendments in post-mine sandpits

19. Evolutionary asymmetry in the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis: conservatism in fungal morphology does not predict host plant growth

20. Plant-soil feedbacks and mycorrhizal type influence temperate forest population dynamics

21. Reduced mycorrhizal responsiveness leads to increased competitive tolerance in an invasive exotic plant

22. Improving plant biomass estimation in the field using partial least squares regression and ridge regression

23. Presence of Archaea in the Indoor Environment and Their Relationships with Housing Characteristics

24. Plant-mycorrhizal fungus co-occurrence network lacks substantial structure

25. Differential Response of Mycorrhizal Plants to Tomato bushy stunt virus and Tomato mosaic virus Infection

26. Author Correction: Evolutionary history of plant hosts and fungal symbionts predicts the strength of mycorrhizal mutualism

27. Mechanisms of plant-soil feedback: interactions among biotic and abiotic drivers

28. Trait-based partner selection drives mycorrhizal network assembly

29. Worldwide evidence of a unimodal relationship between productivity and plant species richness

30. Branching out: Towards a trait-based understanding of fungal ecology

31. Relationships of fungal spore concentrations in the air and meteorological factors

32. Plant species-specific changes in root-inhabiting fungi in a California annual grassland: responses to elevated CO

33. The emerging science of linked plant-fungal invasions

34. Detection of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal spores in the air across different biomes and ecoregions

35. Plant–fungal symbioses as ecological networks: the need to characterize more than just interaction patterns

36. Endophytes inconsistently affect plant communities across Schedonorus arundinaceus hosts

37. Environmental factors influencing fungal growth on gypsum boards and their structural biodeterioration: A university campus case study

38. Invasive plants escape from suppressive soil biota at regional scales

39. Mycorrhizal fungal growth responds to soil characteristics, but not host plant identity, during a primary lacustrine dune succession

40. A trait-based framework to understand life history of mycorrhizal fungi

41. Plant-soil feedback: the past, the present and future challenges

42. Phylogenetic structure of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities along an elevation gradient

43. Microfungi in Indoor Environments: What Is Known and What Is Not

44. Fruiting body and molecular rDNA sampling of fungi in woody debris from logged and unlogged boreal forests in northeastern Ontario

45. The potential of soil amendments for restoring severely disturbed grasslands

46. Cultivar genotype, application and endophyte history affects community impact ofSchedonorus arundinaceus

47. Growth response of crops to soil microbial communities from conventional monocropping and tree-based intercropping systems

48. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal diversity along a Tibetan elevation gradient

49. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities change among three stages of primary sand dune succession but do not alter plant growth

50. Temporal and compositional differences of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities in conventional monocropping and tree-based intercropping systems

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