Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{1816723, author = {Těšitel, Jakub and Li, The bright side of paras and Knotková, Kateřina and McLellan, Richard and Bandaranayake, Pradeepa C. G . and Watson, David M.}, article_location = {ROCKVILLE}, article_number = {4}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiaa069}, keywords = {RHINANTHUS-MINOR; KEYSTONE RESOURCE BIOTIC RESISTANCE; FUNCTIONAL-ROLE; MISTLETOE; HEMIPARASITE; SANDALWOOD; COMMUNITY; IMPACTS; ROOT}, language = {eng}, issn = {0032-0889}, journal = {Plant Physiology}, title = {The bright side of parasitic plants: what are they good for?}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiaa069}, volume = {185}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1816723 AU - Těšitel, Jakub - Li, The bright side of paras - Knotková, Kateřina - McLellan, Richard - Bandaranayake, Pradeepa C. G . - Watson, David M. PY - 2021 TI - The bright side of parasitic plants: what are they good for? JF - Plant Physiology VL - 185 IS - 4 SP - 1309-1324 EP - 1309-1324 PB - American Society of Plant Physiologists SN - 00320889 KW - RHINANTHUS-MINOR KW - KEYSTONE RESOURCE BIOTIC RESISTANCE KW - FUNCTIONAL-ROLE KW - MISTLETOE KW - HEMIPARASITE KW - SANDALWOOD KW - COMMUNITY KW - IMPACTS KW - ROOT UR - https://doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiaa069 N2 - Parasitic plants are mostly viewed as pests. This is caused by several species causing serious damage to agriculture and forestry. There is however much more to parasitic plants than presumed weeds. Many parasitic plans exert even positive effects on natural ecosystems and human society, which we review in this paper. Plant parasitism generally reduces the growth and fitness of the hosts. The network created by a parasitic plant attached to multiple host plant individuals may however trigger transferring systemic signals among these. Parasitic plants have repeatedly been documented to play the role of keystone species in the ecosystems. Harmful effects on community dominants, including invasive species, may facilitate species coexistence and thus increase biodiversity. Many parasitic plants enhance nutrient cycling and provide resources to other organisms like herbivores or pollinators, which contributes to facilitation cascades in the ecosystems. There is also a long tradition of human use of parasitic plants for medicinal and cultural purposes worldwide. Few species provide edible fruits. Several parasitic plants are even cultivated by agriculture/forestry for efficient harvesting of their products. Horticultural use of some parasitic plant species has also been considered. While providing multiple benefits, parasitic plants should always be used with care. In particular, parasitic plant species should not be cultivated outside their native geographical range to avoid the risk of their uncontrolled spread and the resulting damage to ecosystems. ER -
TĚŠITEL, Jakub, The bright side of paras LI, Kateřina KNOTKOVÁ, Richard MCLELLAN, Pradeepa C. G . BANDARANAYAKE a David M. WATSON. The bright side of parasitic plants: what are they good for? \textit{Plant Physiology}. ROCKVILLE: American Society of Plant Physiologists, 2021, roč.~185, č.~4, s.~1309-1324. ISSN~0032-0889. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiaa069.
|