Search Results - "Sikes, Benjamin"

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  1. 1

    Import volumes and biosecurity interventions shape the arrival rate of fungal pathogens by Sikes, Benjamin A, Bufford, Jennifer L, Hulme, Philip E, Cooper, Jerry A, Johnston, Peter R, Duncan, Richard P

    Published in PLoS biology (31-05-2018)
    “…Global trade and the movement of people accelerate biological invasions by spreading species worldwide. Biosecurity measures seek to allow trade and passenger…”
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  2. 2

    Community structure of soil fungi in a novel perennial crop monoculture, annual agriculture, and native prairie reconstruction by McKenna, Thomas P, Crews, Timothy E, Kemp, Laura, Sikes, Benjamin A

    Published in PloS one (30-01-2020)
    “…The use of perennial crop species in agricultural systems may increase ecosystem services and sustainability. Because soil microbial communities play a major…”
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  3. 3

    Plant and Fungal Identity Determines Pathogen Protection of Plant Roots by Arbuscular Mycorrhizas by Sikes, Benjamin A., Cottenie, Karl, Klironomos, John N.

    Published in The Journal of ecology (01-11-2009)
    “…1. A major benefit of the mycorrhizal symbiosis is that it can protect plants from below-ground enemies, such as pathogens. Previous studies have indicated…”
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  4. 4

    Fungal community structure and seasonal trajectories respond similarly to fire across pyrophilic ecosystems by Hopkins, Jacob R, Semenova-Nelsen, Tatiana, Sikes, Benjamin A

    Published in FEMS microbiology ecology (01-01-2021)
    “…ABSTRACT Fire alters microbial community composition, and is expected to increase in frequency due to climate change. Testing whether microbes in different…”
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  5. 5

    Fire as a driver of fungal diversity - A synthesis of current knowledge by Fox, Sam, Sikes, Benjamin A., Brown, Shawn P., Cripps, Cathy L., Glassman, Sydney I., Hughes, Karen, Semenova-Nelsen, Tatiana, Jumpponen, Ari

    Published in Mycologia (04-03-2022)
    “…Fires occur in most terrestrial ecosystems where they drive changes in the traits, composition, and diversity of fungal communities. Fires range from rare,…”
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  6. 6

    Pine savanna restoration on agricultural landscapes: The path back to native savanna ecosystem services by Dixon, Cinnamon M., Robertson, Kevin M., Ulyshen, Michael D., Sikes, Benjamin A.

    Published in The Science of the total environment (20-04-2022)
    “…Restoration of savanna ecosystems within their historic range is expected to increase provision of ecosystem services to resident human populations. However,…”
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  7. 7

    Abiotic and biotic context dependency of perennial crop yield by McKenna, Thomas P, Koziol, Liz, Bever, James D, Crews, Timothy E, Sikes, Benjamin A

    Published in PloS one (26-06-2020)
    “…Perennial crops in agricultural systems can increase sustainability and the magnitude of ecosystem services, but yield may depend upon biotic context,…”
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  8. 8

    How social and ecological characteristics shape transaction costs in polycentric wildfire governance: insights from the Sequoia-Kings Canyon Ecosystem, California, USA by Bixler, R. Patrick, Epanchin-Niell, Rebecca, Brunson, Mark, Tarver, Ryan, Sikes, Benjamin, McClure, Meredith, Aslan, Clare

    Published in Ecology and society (01-03-2023)
    “…Many contemporary social and ecological challenges in forested ecosystems (climate change, invasive species, wildland-urban interface development, and…”
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  9. 9

    Frequent fire reorganizes fungal communities and slows decomposition across a heterogeneous pine savanna landscape by Semenova-Nelsen, Tatiana A., Platt, William J., Patterson, Taylor R., Huffman, Jean, Sikes, Benjamin A.

    Published in The New phytologist (01-10-2019)
    “…Pyrogenic savannas with a tree–grassland ‘matrix’ experience frequent fires (i.e. every 1–3 yr). Aboveground responses to frequent fires have been well…”
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  10. 10

    Soil microbes drive the classic plant diversity-–productivity pattern by Schnitzer, Stefan A, Klironomos, John N, HilleRisLambers, Janneke, Kinkel, Linda L, Reich, Peter B, Xiao, Kun, Rillig, Matthias C, Sikes, Benjamin A, Callaway, Ragan M, Mangan, Scott A, van Nes, Egbert H, Scheffer, Marten

    Published in Ecology (Durham) (01-02-2011)
    “…Ecosystem productivity commonly increases asymptotically with plant species diversity, and determining the mechanisms responsible for this well-known pattern…”
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  11. 11

    Frequent fire slows microbial decomposition of newly deposited fine fuels in a pyrophilic ecosystem by Hopkins, Jacob R., Huffman, Jean M., Platt, William J., Sikes, Benjamin A.

    Published in Oecologia (01-07-2020)
    “…Frequent fires maintain nearly 50% of terrestrial ecosystems, and drive ecosystem changes that govern future fires. Since fires are dependent on available…”
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  12. 12

    Plant and root-endophyte assembly history: interactive effects on native and exotic plants by Sikes, Benjamin A, Hawkes, Christine V, Fukami, Tadashi

    Published in Ecology (Durham) (01-02-2016)
    “…Differences in the arrival timing of plants and soil biota may result in different plant communities through priority effects, potentially affecting the…”
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  13. 13

    Pyrophilic Plants Respond to Postfire Soil Conditions in a Frequently Burned Longleaf Pine Savanna by Hopkins, Jacob R, Huffman, Jean M, Jones, Neil J, Platt, William J, Sikes, Benjamin A

    Published in The American naturalist (01-03-2023)
    “…AbstractFire-plant feedbacks engineer recurrent fires in pyrophilic ecosystems like savannas. The mechanisms sustaining these feedbacks may be related to plant…”
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  14. 14

    Novel interactions between alien pathogens and native plants increase plant–pathogen network connectance and decrease specialization by Bufford, Jennifer L., Hulme, Philip E., Sikes, Benjamin A., Cooper, Jerry A., Johnston, Peter R., Duncan, Richard P., Allan, Eric

    Published in The Journal of ecology (01-03-2020)
    “…Alien plant pathogens are a threat to native plants and are increasingly integrating into native plant–pathogen networks, but how these novel plant–pathogen…”
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  15. 15

    Substrate and low intensity fires influence bacterial communities in longleaf pine savanna by Dao, Viet Q., Potts, Stephen E., Johnson, Crystal N., Sikes, Benjamin A., Platt, William J.

    Published in Scientific reports (03-12-2022)
    “…Bacterial communities associated with vegetation-soil interfaces have important roles in terrestrial ecosystems. These bacterial communities, studied almost…”
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  16. 16

    When do arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi protect plant roots from pathogens? by Sikes, Benjamin A

    Published in Plant signaling & behavior (01-06-2010)
    “…Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi are mainly thought to facilitate phosphorus uptake in plants, but they can also perform several other functions that are…”
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  17. 17

    Suppression of root-endogenous fungi in persistently inundated Typha roots by Klymiuk, Ashley A., Sikes, Benjamin A.

    Published in Mycologia (03-09-2019)
    “…Wetland soils are defined by anoxic and reducing conditions that impose biogeochemically hostile conditions on plant roots and their endogenous fungal…”
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  18. 18

    Taxonomic similarity, more than contact opportunity, explains novel plant–pathogen associations between native and alien taxa by Bufford, Jennifer L., Hulme, Philip E., Sikes, Benjamin A., Cooper, Jerry A., Johnston, Peter R., Duncan, Richard P.

    Published in The New phytologist (01-11-2016)
    “…Novel associations between plants and pathogens can have serious impacts on managed and natural ecosystems world-wide. The introduction of alien plants…”
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  19. 19

    Quantifying ecological variation across jurisdictional boundaries in a management mosaic landscape by Aslan, Clare E., Zachmann, Luke, McClure, Meredith, Sikes, Benjamin A., Veloz, Samuel, Brunson, Mark W., Epanchin-Niell, Rebecca S., Dickson, Brett G.

    Published in Landscape ecology (01-04-2021)
    “…Context Large landscapes exhibit natural heterogeneity. Land management can impose additional variation, altering ecosystem patterns. Habitat characteristics…”
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  20. 20

    Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities change among three stages of primary sand dune succession but do not alter plant growth by Sikes, Benjamin A., Maherali, Hafiz, Klironomos, John N.

    Published in Oikos (01-11-2012)
    “…Plant interactions with soil biota could have a significant impact on plant successional trajectory by benefiting plants in a particular successional stage…”
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