Publications by authors named "Melissa Baynes"

Dung fungi, such as Sordaria fimicola, generally reproduce sexually with ascospores discharged from mammalian dung after passage through herbivores. Their life cycle is thought to be obligate to dung, and thus their ascospores in Quaternary sediments have been interpreted as evidence of past mammalian herbivore activity. Reports of dung fungi as endophytes would seem to challenge the view that they are obligate to dung.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Even under ideal conditions for infection, multiple fungi co-inoculated in flower heads resulted in only one type of fungus reappearing in matured seeds, indicating exclusive competition among the fungi.
  • * The findings suggest that these competitive interactions among fungi could impact the future growth, emergence, and reproductive success of the next generation of plants.
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Bromus tectorum, or cheatgrass, is native to Eurasia and widely invasive in western North America. By late spring, this annual plant has dispersed its seed and died; its aboveground biomass then becomes fine fuel that burns as frequently as once every 3-5 y in its invaded range. Cheatgrass has proven to be better adapted to fire there than many competing plants, but the contribution of its fungal symbionts to this adaptation had not previously been studied.

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