SYMBIOSES OF GRASSES WITH SEEDBORNE FUNGAL ENDOPHYTES
University of Kentucky · ETH Zurich
Abstract
Grasses (family Poaceae) and fungi of the family Clavicipitaceae have a long history of symbiosis ranging in a continuum from mutualisms to antagonisms. This continuum is particularly evident among symbioses involving the fungal genus Epichloe (asexual forms = Neotyphodium spp.). In the more mutualistic symbiota, the epichloe endophytes are vertically transmitted via host seeds, and in the more antagonistic symbiota they spread contagiously and suppress host seed set. The endophytes gain shelter, nutrition, and dissemination via host propagules, and can contribute an array of host fitness enhancements including protection against insect and vertebrate herbivores and root nematodes, enhancements of drought…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 48.45
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 158
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Neotyphodium
- Endophyte
- Epichloë
- Symbiosis
- Host (biology)
- Botany
- Propagule