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Tadashi Fukami

Showing results (51-60 of 86) with videos related to

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The ISME Journal|October 19, 2019
Land-use change has host-specific influences on avian gut microbiomesPriscilla A San Juan, J Nicholas Hendershot, Gretchen C Daily, et al.
Plos One|January 28, 2014
Honey bees avoid nectar colonized by three bacterial species, but not by a yeast species, isolated from the bee gutAshley P Good, Marie-Pierre L Gauthier, Rachel L Vannette, et al.
Current Opinion in Insect Science|October 16, 2020
Yeast-nectar interactions: metacommunities and effects on pollinatorsHans Jacquemyn, María I Pozo, Sergio Álvarez-Pérez, et al.
ISME Communications|October 13, 2025
Experimental species introductions influence fungal community succession through positive and negative effects on resident speciesSonja Saine, Tadashi Fukami, Reijo Penttilä, et al.
Environmental Microbiology Reports|November 27, 2016
Non-target effects of fungicides on nectar-inhabiting fungi of almond flowersRobert N Schaeffer, Rachel L Vannette, Claire Brittain, et al.
The New Phytologist|December 24, 2024
Tiny but mighty? Overview of a decade of research on nectar bacteriaSergio Quevedo-Caraballo, Clara de Vega, Bart Lievens, et al.
Ecology Letters|January 29, 2011
Linking community and ecosystem dynamics through spatial ecologyFrançois Massol, Dominique Gravel, Nicolas Mouquet, et al.
Ecology Letters|December 23, 2011
Do assembly history effects attenuate from species to ecosystem properties? A field test with wood-inhabiting fungiIan A Dickie, Tadashi Fukami, J Paula Wilkie, et al.
Ecology Letters|July 5, 2016
Convergence and divergence in a long-term old-field succession: the importance of spatial scale and species abundanceShao-Peng Li, Marc W Cadotte, Scott J Meiners, et al.
The New Phytologist|April 14, 2017
Evolutionary priority effects persist in anthropogenically created habitats, but not through nonnative plant invasionAngela J Brandt, William G Lee, Andrew J Tanentzap, et al.
Pageof 9

Showing results (51-60 of 86) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 9
The ISME Journal|October 19, 2019
Land-use change has host-specific influences on avian gut microbiomesPriscilla A San Juan, J Nicholas Hendershot, Gretchen C Daily, et al.
Plos One|January 28, 2014
Honey bees avoid nectar colonized by three bacterial species, but not by a yeast species, isolated from the bee gutAshley P Good, Marie-Pierre L Gauthier, Rachel L Vannette, et al.
Current Opinion in Insect Science|October 16, 2020
Yeast-nectar interactions: metacommunities and effects on pollinatorsHans Jacquemyn, María I Pozo, Sergio Álvarez-Pérez, et al.
ISME Communications|October 13, 2025
Experimental species introductions influence fungal community succession through positive and negative effects on resident speciesSonja Saine, Tadashi Fukami, Reijo Penttilä, et al.
Environmental Microbiology Reports|November 27, 2016
Non-target effects of fungicides on nectar-inhabiting fungi of almond flowersRobert N Schaeffer, Rachel L Vannette, Claire Brittain, et al.
The New Phytologist|December 24, 2024
Tiny but mighty? Overview of a decade of research on nectar bacteriaSergio Quevedo-Caraballo, Clara de Vega, Bart Lievens, et al.
Ecology Letters|January 29, 2011
Linking community and ecosystem dynamics through spatial ecologyFrançois Massol, Dominique Gravel, Nicolas Mouquet, et al.
Ecology Letters|December 23, 2011
Do assembly history effects attenuate from species to ecosystem properties? A field test with wood-inhabiting fungiIan A Dickie, Tadashi Fukami, J Paula Wilkie, et al.
Ecology Letters|July 5, 2016
Convergence and divergence in a long-term old-field succession: the importance of spatial scale and species abundanceShao-Peng Li, Marc W Cadotte, Scott J Meiners, et al.
The New Phytologist|April 14, 2017
Evolutionary priority effects persist in anthropogenically created habitats, but not through nonnative plant invasionAngela J Brandt, William G Lee, Andrew J Tanentzap, et al.
Pageof 9