National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Environmental drivers of microbial community composition in a temperate forest
Martinović, Tijana ; Baldrian, Petr (advisor) ; Vašutová, Martina (referee) ; Kopecký, Jan (referee)
Recently, much attention has been focused on the importance of forests to the global carbon cycle. Microorganisms are a critical component of the carbon cycle in forests, participating in important ecosystem processes and degrading various carbon compounds, from simple to highly recalcitrant compounds. However, most studies in this regard have focused on fungi. Only in recent years has it become known that bacteria are also capable of degrading complex plant polymers in soil, and that their contribution to the carbon cycle may be as important as that of fungi. Furthermore, our knowledge of the temporal dynamics of both fungal and bacterial communities is limited, as well as their response to different environmental drivers. The main objective of this dissertation was to fill these knowledge gaps by (1) quantifying the rate of temporal turnover of fungal and bacterial communities in soils of temperate forests, (2) describing the factors that shape fungal communities in spruce and beech stands during their long-term development (stand age), (3) assessing the contribution of fungi and bacteria to the utilisation of different carbon sources in forest soils, and finally (4) describing the development of bacterial communities in response to clearcutting of a spruce stand. The study of microbes...
Treeline shift under global change - ectomycorrhizas as a limiting factor?
Vašutová, Martina ; Holub, Filip ; Čermák, Martin ; Cudlín, Pavel
It is assumed that global change will cause a treeline shift . Because competitive abilities and natural regeneration of trees are infl uenced by ectomycorrhizal (ECM) symbiosis and fi ne roots and ECM mycelia play a key role in belowground carbon turnover, we have studied the ECM associations of treeline ecosystems. We aim to fi nd out how resistant and resilient current ECM associations of these ecosystems are and whether the absence of appropriate ECM symbionts could be a limiting factor of an ecosystem shift . We have focused on natural mountain spruce forests and spruce forests on the treeline; dwarf pine stands with scattered spruce trees above the treeline will be studied in years to come. Ectomycorrhizas were described by morphological features and sequenced to identify fungal species. In the case of taxonomically complicated ECM fungal groups, sequences from microscopically identifi ed sporocarps were used for the identifi cation of ectomycorrhizas. A disproportion between ECM fungi diversity in spruce stands and dwarf pine stands revealed based on a literature review can indicate diff erent ectomycorrhiza patterns at the treeline. According to preliminary results from the Giant Mts. there is an adequate ECM fungal species diversity in mountain spruce forest and spruce forests on the treeline.

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1 Vašutová, Mariana
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