Search Results - "Okada, Hidehito"

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  1. 1

    Symbiotic germination and development of fully mycoheterotrophic plants convergently targeting similar Glomeraceae taxa by Suetsugu, Kenji, Okada, Hidehito

    Published in Environmental microbiology (01-10-2021)
    “…Summary Plants producing dust seeds often meet their carbon demands by exploiting fungi at the seedling stage. This germination strategy (i.e…”
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    Journal Article
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    Mycorrhizal communities of two closely related species, Pyrola subaphylla and P. japonica, with contrasting degrees of mycoheterotrophy in a sympatric habitat by Suetsugu, Kenji, Matsuoka, Shunsuke, Shutoh, Kohtaroh, Okada, Hidehito, Taketomi, Shintaro, Onimaru, Kaede, Tanabe, Akifumi S., Yamanaka, Hiroki

    Published in Mycorrhiza (01-03-2021)
    “…Mycoheterotrophic plants typically form associations with a narrow range of mycorrhizal fungi. Consequently, mycorrhizal specialization is often considered to…”
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    Journal Article
  5. 5

    Mycorrhizal specialization toward each distinct Oliveonia fungus in two closely related photosynthetic Dactylostalix orchids by Suetsugu, Kenji, Okada, Hidehito

    Published in Functional ecology (03-11-2024)
    “…Abstract Although rhizoctonias from Ceratobasidiaceae, Tulasnellaceae and Serendipitaceae are typical orchid mycobionts, orchid mycorrhizal fungi exhibit vast…”
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    Journal Article
  6. 6

    Stable Isotope Signatures Illuminate Diverse Nutritional Strategies in Rhizoctonias and Their Orchid Partners by Suetsugu, Kenji, Matsubayashi, Jun, Okada, Hidehito

    Published in Plant, cell and environment (01-10-2024)
    “…Understanding the nutritional ecology of orchids, particularly those in symbiosis with rhizoctonias, presents a complex challenge. This complexity arises…”
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    Consumption of the ectomycorrhizal fungi Rhizopogon roseolus and R. luteolus by Chamaesyrphus japonicus (Diptera: Syrphidae) by Okada, Hidehito, Sueyoshi, Masahiro, Suetsugu, Kenji

    Published in Entomological science (01-06-2021)
    “…In spite of the uniform flower feeding habitat of adult hoverflies, their larval feeding ecology is diverse. The genus Chamaesyrphus Mik, 1895, is rare and its…”
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    Journal Article