You are on page 1of 2

1.

Endo/Arbuscular (~95% of plant species)

Acer
fagaceae (Quercus, Fagus, Castanea)
oleaceae (Fraxinus, Olea, …)
tiliaceae (Tilia, Populus, …)
ulmaceae (Celtis, Ulmus, Zelkova, …)
non-pinaceae conifers (Araucaria, Chamaecyparis, Cryptomeria, Cupressus,
Cupressocyparis, Ginkgo, Juniperus, Metasequoia, Podocarpus, Sequoia, Taxus)
rosacea (Crataegus, Malus, Prunus, Pyrus, …, generally fruit trees)
shrubs like Abelia, Berberis, Buddleia, Buxus, Calistemon, Callicarpa, Caryopteris,
Ceanothus, Cercis, Chaenomeles, Lonicera, Choisya, Cornus, Cotinus, Cotoneasters,
Cytisus, Deutzia, Eleagnus, Escalonia, Euonymus, Forsythia, Genista, Hamamelis, Hebe,
Hibiscus, Hypericum, Ilex, Lagerstroemia, Laurus, Mahonia, Nandina, Pyracantha, Ribes,
Spiraeas, Syringa, Viburnum, Weigelia…
the majority of tropical trees

2. Ecto (~2% of plant species)

fagaceae (Quercus, Fagus, Castanea)


tiliaceae (Tilia, Populus…)
betulaceae (Carpinus, Alnus, Betula, Corylus…)
salicaceae (Salix…)
myrtaceae (Eugenia, Eucalyptus…)
juglandaceae (Juglans…)
pinaceae (Pinus, Cedrus, Larix, Abies, Picea, Pseudolarix, Tsuga…)
other species like Acacia, Robinia…

3. Ericoid (~3% of plant species)


Orchidaceae and most Ericaceae
4. Arbutoid
Arbutus and Arctostaphylos
5. Orchid
Orchidacea
Alnus, Eucalyptus, Populus and Tilia are special as they can host both Endo and Ecto at the
same stage of development.

You might also like