Symbiosis with Frankia sp. Benefits the establishment of Alnus viridis ssp. Crispa and Alnus incana ssp. Rugosa in tailings sand from the Canadian oil sands industry

From National Research Council Canada

DOIResolve DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoleng.2014.03.061
AuthorSearch for: ; Search for: ; Search for: ; Search for: ; Search for: 1; Search for: ; Search for:
Affiliation
  1. National Research Council of Canada. Energy, Mining and Environment
FormatText, Article
SubjectActinorhizal symbiosis; Alder; Early-successional; Extraction procedure; Frankia; Naphthenic acid; Oil sands industry; bacterium; biomass allocation; ecological engineering; growth rate; host-symbiont interaction; inoculation; reclaimed land; restoration ecology; revegetation; root system; symbiosis; tailings
Abstract
Publication date
In
LanguageEnglish
Peer reviewedYes
NPARC number21272804
Export citationExport as RIS
Report a correctionReport a correction (opens in a new tab)
Record identifiera0f5ad54-de79-42e2-9007-bf8cbb72c359
Record created2014-12-03
Record modified2020-04-22
Date modified: