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Project

Understanding and Managing Urban Ectomycorrhizal Fungi Communities to Increase the Health and Ecosystem Service Provisioning of Urban Trees (UrbanMycoserve)

As 80% of the EU population is expected to live in urban areas by 2020, the quality of the urban environment is of growing importance. Urban trees are key elements in mitigating the common environmental problems in urban areas, trough provisioning crucial ecosystem services such as air quality improvement and microclimate mitigation.However, urban trees typically face harsh environmental conditions, resulting in reduced health, and potentially jeopardizing ecosystem service provisioning. because of their well-known host tree benefits, Ectomycorrhizal Fungi (EM) may play an important role in urban tree management, improving tree vigor, and thus the extent and resilience of ecosystem services delivered by urban trees under stress. Our knowledge of the EM community of urban trees, of its drivers, and of which role these fungi, or specific functional groups, play in sustaining tree health and tree ecosystem service delivery is very limited.The aims of this project are: 1.to provide an assessment of the EM community and functional group composition of urban trees, and of its environmental drivers, using next-generation sequencing techniques; 2. to relate specific EM, or functional groups of EM, to tree health, and tree ecosystem service delivery and resilience, using advanced noninvasive spectral and physiological sensing technology, diameter growth measurements, and urban biophysical modeling; 3. to develop and test (in situ & ex situ) a dedicated EM-inoculum to improve urban tree health, and ecosystem service delivery and resilience

Date:1 Mar 2017 →  31 Oct 2020
Keywords:Urban Trees, Urban Ectomycorrhizal Fungi Communities
Disciplines:Plant biology