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         Fungi Mycology Botany:     more books (100)
  1. Arbuscular Mycorrhizas: Physiology and Function
  2. Amanita of North America by David T. Jenkins, 1986-03
  3. Neurospora: Contributions of a Model Organism by Rowland H. Davis, 2000-08-17
  4. Die Mikroskopischen Boden-Pilze: Ihr Leben, ihre Verbreitung sowie ihre öconomische und Pathogene Bedeutung by A. Niethammer, 1937-06-30
  5. Mr. Bloomfield's Orchard: The Mysterious World of Mushrooms, Molds, and Mycologists by Nicholas P. Money, 2002-10-17
  6. The Sacred Mushroom Seeker: Essays for R. Gordon Wasson (Historical Ethno and Economic Botany Series Vol 4)
  7. Mushrooms of Northeastern North America by Alan E. Bessette, Arleen R. Bessette, et all 1997-09
  8. How to Identify Mushrooms to Genus II: Field Identification of Genera by David L. Largent, H. Thiers, 1977-06-01
  9. Flora Agaricina Neerlandica, Volume 5: Critical Monographs on Families of Agarics and Boleti Occurring in the Netherlands by M. E., Ed. Noordeloos, 2001
  10. Trichomycetes and Other Fungal Groups
  11. Checklist of the British & Irish Basidiomycota by N, W Legon, A Henrici, 2005-07-17
  12. Patterns in Fungal Development
  13. Virus and Virus-like Diseases of Potatoes and Production of Seed-Potatoes
  14. Yeasts: Characteristics and Identification by J. A. Barnett, R. W. Payne, et all 2000-07-10

81. OSU: Botany And Plant Pathology: Botany 461/561 - Image Server
Mycorrhizal fungi Microscopic views of fungi Class webpages fungi of theMcDonaldDunn Research Forest by Anki Camacho Tom Volk s fungi by Tom Volk
http://ocid.nacse.org/classroom/fungi/bot461/imgindex.html
Image Server
Bot 461/561
This page is an index to all image pages used throughout this web site. Please feel free to use these images in your own work but please provide reference to this web site as the source. The correct URL to reference is: http://www.bcc.orst.edu/bot461/index.htm Many people have contributed their work to this web site and we would like to thank the following people for their contribution: Wes Colgan, Eric T. Peterson, Jamie L. Platt, Rytas Vilgalys and many others. Several of the images referenced in these webpage were taken from, or they are linked to the incredible websites authored by Anki Camacho and Tom Volk. Also, starting in 1998 the graduate students enrolled in BOT 561 were required to construct a webpage on a species of fungi and many of these images are used throughout BOT 461/561 webpages. All of the images and the webpages themselves can be accessed below. Additionally, since eventually there will be a large number of links on this page you can move easily to the major grouping you'd like using the following links. Macroscopic images of fungi
Mycorrhizal
fungi
Microscopic views
of fungi
Class webpages

Fungi of the McDonald-Dunn Research Forest
by Anki Camacho
Tom Volk's Fungi
by Tom Volk
Macroscopic images of fungi
  • Ascomycetes
  • 82. The Botany Department At The Field Museum
    botany is the scientific study of plants and fungi. Scientists in the Departmentof botany at The Field Museum are interested in learning why there are so
    http://www.fieldmuseum.org/research_collections/botany/default.htm
    Botany is the scientific study of plants and fungi. Scientists in the Department of Botany at The Field Museum are interested in learning why there are so many different plants and fungi in the world, how this diversity is distributed across the globe and how best to classify it, and what important roles these organisms play in the environment and in human cultures.
    Timothy C. Plowman Latin American Research Award

    The Botany Department at The Field Museum invites applications for the year 2005 Timothy C. Plowman Latin American Research Award. The award of $3,000.00 is designed to assist students and young professionals to visit the Field Museum and use our extensive economic botany and systematic collections. More information...
    Agaricales of Costa Rican
    Quercus Forests ... Museum Store
    1400 S. Lake Shore Dr, Chicago, IL 60605-2496
    Linking Policy
    Technical Support
    webmaster@fieldmuseum.org

    83. Botany 332, Why Study Fungi?
    Introduction to fungi, botany 332/Plant Pathology 332 course, A few organismsknown loosely as fungi (and also studied by mycologists) are better
    http://www.botany.wisc.edu/courses/botany_332/whyfungi.html
    home about fungi UW mycology Why study fungi? Fungi: Botany/Plant Pathology 332
    Spring Semesters, Univ. of WI Madison Where are fungi in my life? Your bread , the green fuzz on the bread, the beer in the fridge, the orange-pink crud on the shower curtain, the itch between your toes, the mushrooms in your houseplant or flooded carpeting, all are related to the growth of fungi. Other fungal influences on humans led to the Witch Trials in Salem Massachusetts, Irish immigration to the US in the 1860's, and the savings of millions of human lives through the use of antibiotics What exactly are fungi? Fungi are heterotrophic (they eat other things for food) but are not animals. They typically do not move but are not plants. Fungi can exist as microscopic spores , or may be some of the largest organisms on earth, as with the mycelium or underground portion of an Armillaria mushroom in Michigan that was estimated to weigh 100 tons. Most fungi are placed into Kingdom Fungi , and are more closely related to animals than to the plants. A few organisms known loosely as fungi (and also studied by

    84. Untitled
    botany 135 Magical Mushrooms Mystical Molds. The year was 1969. I was a sophomoreand I had just completed my first course in mycology.
    http://www.botany.hawaii.edu/faculty/wong/BOT135/DESCRIPT.htm
    The specific topics are listed in the Botany 135 Syllabus.

    85. Diversity Of Life Web Index
    USDA s Systematic botany and mycology Laboratory, your source for taxonomic The Virtual Foliage Homepage General botany Directory, Fungus Subdirectory
    http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/6243/diversity3.html
    ALL SPECIES BACTERIA PROTISTS FUNGI ... Send me an e-mail
    Link to Wendy's Conservation Homepage Wendy's resume
    KINGDOM: FUNGI
    (MUSHROOMS, YEASTS, MOLDS, ETC.)
    Skip the introduction and jump to the fungus links:
    general information
    indices images basidiomycetes ... zygomycetes (bread molds)
    Fungi are the great decomposers of the world (along with some help from the bacteria). They are multi-cellular eukaryotes, except for the yeasts which are unicellular. Although often lumped with plants and algae as "flora" (as opposed to "fauna"- animals), fungi are actually not close relatives of the plants at all. All fungi are distinguished by having no motile (free-moving) cells at any point during the life cycle. Fungi are also generally characterized by their method of obtaining energy, namely absorption of nutrients from their surroundings. This sets them apart from plants,which use photosynthesis to obtain energy from the sun, and animals, which actively injest food. Another characteristic of fungi is cell walls enforced with chitin, the same substance found in insect exoskeletons. (For comparison, plant cell walls are made of cellulose, and animal cells do not have cell walls at all.)
    Fungi are mainly terrestrial, and grow in filaments called "hyphae" (singular = "hypha"). Tightly packed masses of hyphae called "mycelia" (singular = "mycelium") form larger structures. The most familiar parts of fungi are spore-producing reproductive bodies such as mushrooms, toadstools, "shelves" of fungus on trees, puff balls, blue or green molds, etc.

    86. Botanical Books - Specialist Scientific And Reference Books Including Systematic
    mycology. The first comprehensive checklist of the fungi of Great Britain and mycology. A modern account of these spectacular fungi, many of which are
    http://www.kewbooks.com/asps/Search.asp?types=yes&type=Mycology

    87. National Mycological Herbarium (DAOM)
    Biodiversity (mycology and botany) Fungal Identification Background;mycology Herbarium use; Link to the National Fungal Identification Service
    http://res2.agr.ca/ecorc/daom/daom_e.htm
    Eastern Cereal
    and Oilseed
    Research Centre About Us Research Highlights Genetic Enhancement and Food Safety Bioproducts, Bioprocesses and Bioinformatics ... Commercialization
    National Mycological Herbarium
    Background:
    The National Mycological Herbarium/Herbier National de Mycologie is internationally recognized under the acronym DAOM, as listed in Index Herbariorum. DAOM stands for Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, Mycology. The collection holds over 300,000 preserved specimens (both numbered and accessioned and major exsiccatae holdings) which makes it the largest mycological herbarium in Canada. While direct responsibility for plant inspection at ports of entry and research on control of specific plant pathogens devolved through division of labour to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency [CFIA] (formerly portions of Food Production and Inspection Branch) and various regional research stations, the National Mycological Herbarium serves as the main central reference collection for exotic and native fungal plant diseases and it is regular consulted or used as a repository for collections by staff in the nearby CFIA. DAOM along with the Canadian Collection of Fungal Cultures (CCFC) serve as a backbone for research on fungal diversity in Canada and for systematics research in mycology.

    88. Natural Selection: Subject Gateway To The Natural World
    Systematic botany and mycology Laboratory (SBML). Fungal databases. This pagegives access to a number of databases maintained by staff at the Systematic
    http://nature.ac.uk/text/browse/579.50747.html
    high graphics
    Nature
    • home search browse about ... North America
      This site presents information on the Cryptogamic Herbarium of the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) in Toronto, Canada. It gives information on the herbarium's location, its collections (which include more than 350,000 accessioned specimens of fungi, lichenized fungi, mosses and liverworts, and algae), who uses them and why they are important, as well as a section explaining what cryptogamic plants are. Herbaria; Royal Ontario Museum. Cryptogamic Herbarium;
      Field Museum, The
      The Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago aims to provide collection-based research and learning - combining anthropology, botany, geology, palaeontology and zoology - to increase public understanding of the world. Its Web site provides general information on the Museum, its history and current exhibitions. Well-illustrated and educational, the site includes information on "Sue" - the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex fossil ever found - and on the man-eating lions of Tsavo (Uganda), which are on display at the Museum. Extensive information on research undertaken by the Museum is provided and many searchable databases are available. Field Museum; Natural history museums;

    89. Mycology Resources: Discussion And News
    Sellers of antiquarian and hardto-find books in mycology and botany (NJ, USA) . A new journal of fungal biology, initiated in 2001. Mycological Progress
    http://mycology.cornell.edu/fdiscuss.html
    WWW VL Mycology: Discussion Groups, News, Books
    HOME
    ABOUT COLLECTIONS DIRECTORIES DISCUSSIONS GENERAL GENETICS GUIDES MUSHROOMS ... INDEX
    Mycological Resources on the Internet: Publications and discussion
    Journals, books, and newsletters; discussion forums Publications Discussion Groups
    Publications
    A Plain and Easy Account of British Fungi, by M.C. Cooke
    Cooke's 1898 book, "A Plain and Easy Account of British Fungi (6th edition)" is an early introductory text. Mike Walton has posted it on the web.
    A Treatise on the Esculent Funguses of Britain, by C.D. Badham
    Badham's 1847 book, "A Treatise on the Esculent Funguses of England" is an early account of edible fungi. Many of the scientific names have changed now, but the text and its accompanying plates are an interesting diversion. Mike Walton has posted it on the web.
    American Mushroom Institute
    A trade association representing those who grow, process, and market cultivated mushrooms in the US, the AMI promotes mushroom cultivation and consumption. Their web site includes information about their journal, "Mushroom News" and the Sinden Scholarship Fund for cultivation of edible fungi.
    American Society of Plant Taxonomists
    This site includes the ASPT newsletter, and information about the ASPT journal Systematic Botany, and Systematic Botany Monographs.

    90. Fungal_inventory
    Duke University (or visit http//www.botany.duke.edu/fungi/mycolab). The Duke Forest Mycological Observatory (DFMO) will permit us to study those
    http://www.biology.duke.edu/fungi/mycolab/DFMO/
    A Microbial Observatory in the Duke Forest: Exploring fungal diversity in response
    to environmental change DFMO: The Duke Forest Mycological Observatory IMAGES of some Duke Forest fungi click here to access DFMO database (includes photos, sequences, and other collection data)
    O'Brien et al (submitted)
    The Duke Forest, lying near the eastern edge of the North Carolina piedmont plateau, is one of the nation's premier outdoor laboratories for studies on effects of environmental change, different land use histories, and the dynamics of naturally evolving forest communities. In 2000, we established the Duke Mycological Observatory to apply DNA-based approaches for biodiversity assessment of fungi and other microbes . In conjunction with other ongoing studies in the Duke Forest (such as the Free-Air Carbon dioxide enrichment, or FACE experiment), this project is also examining fungal community structure to assess the impacts of various environmental variables such as increases in carbon dioxide concentration on fungal diversity.
    Further information about the Duke Forest Mycological Observatory can be obtained from Dr. Rytas Vilgalys (

    91. CSIRO PUBLISHING - Series
    fungi of Australia will be an essential text/reference for mycologists, botanists, Plant Science / botany Mosses fungi fungi of Australia Series
    http://www.publish.csiro.au/nid/22/pid/324.htm
    appPath = ""; Home Journals About Us Contact Us ... Shopping Cart You are here: Series Search All Content Journals Other Content Advanced Search New Releases Forthcoming Releases Web Specials ... For Authors
    Fungi of Australia Volume 1A Introduction-Classification Fungi of Australia Series Australian Biological Resources Study Colour illustrations
    435 pages
    Publishers: CSIRO PUBLISHING / Australian Biological Resources Study (ABRS)
    Paperback - ISBN: 0643058893 - AU $59.00 Hardback - ISBN: 0643058907 - AU $75.00 Description Features Readership Reviews ... Related Categories Description
    This is the first of two introductory books to this major new series. Together, Volumes 1A and 1B will provide an introduction to the series, and consists of a collection of review essays on many aspects of Australian mycology, placed in a world context. The major component of Volume 1A is a discussion on the classification of the fungi, and a new classification to the level of Order. Features
    • New classification
    • Keys, of world-wide scope, to orders

    92. Mycology
    MykoWeb Mushrooms, fungi, mycology . Thumbshots, MykoWeb Mushrooms, fungi,mycology Information on mushrooms, fungi, mycophagy, and mycology primarily for
    http://biology.designerz.com/biology-mycology.php
    var tag="-biology.designerz.com";var domain="-biology.designerz.com"; Portal Map Science Biology News Biology News ...
    Biology Chat
    Channels Visited Clear Featured Links Science
    Biology News

    News

    Domain Names
    ... Sign up for our mailing list Biology
    • Mycology
      Biology
      Biology Mycology
      Suggest a site
      Biology Mycology
      Featured Results (opens in a new window) The Ones That Stain Blue
      Psilocybe mushrooms: studies in ethnomycology
      ratings
      : The Ones That Stain Blue Canadian Mycological Resource
      A mycological portal for Canadians. Information and links which are useful for amateur and professional mycologists.
      ratings
      : Canadian Mycological Resource MykoWeb: Mushrooms, Fungi, Mycology
      Information on mushrooms, fungi, mycophagy, and mycology primarily for the amateur. Includes photos, descriptions, recipes, mostly San Francisco, CA area. ratings : MykoWeb: Mushrooms, Fungi, Mycology Morel Mushroom Biology and Evolution Presents information about morels, along with unorthodox hypotheses about their evolution. ratings : Morel Mushroom Biology and Evolution Resupinate Aphyllophorales Descriptions, images, bibliography of resupinate wood inhabiting fungi collected in southern Switzerland. Also in Italian and French.

    93. Fungi
    Worldwide directory for mycology and lichenology. Fungal Databases. SystematicBotany and mycology Laboratory. Agricultural Research Service.
    http://tolweb.org/tree?group=fungi

    94. Mycology
    The Systematic botany and mycology Laboratory (SBML) is based at the Beltsville A large part of the site focuses on fungal research and free access to
    http://agrifor.ac.uk/browse/cabi/be6fcd43149c35379f2380722dc0e487.html
    low graphics
    mycology
    broader: biology other: agricultural sciences fungi microbiology Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory (SBML) ... Wild mushrooms and poisoning One in a series of Information Notes provided by the Plant Pathology Extension of North Carolina State University. Written by Charles W Averre, Extension Plant Pathologist, and Larry F Grand, this fact sheet provides information on wild mushrooms. It discusses the symptoms of poisoning, what to do if someone has eaten an unidentified mushroom, and provides links to the profiles of some of the most poisonous mushrooms. Colour photographs are included. toxicology poisonous fungi mycology mushrooms
    Last modified: 16 Sep 2005

    95. MYCOLOGIA BALCANICA
    It is the first Bulgarian mycological NGO. Institute of botany of “Red listof the Bulgarian threatened fungi”; “Mycological investigation of the
    http://www.mycobalcan.com/bms.php
    Aims Editorial Board Instructions to Authors Paper's Layout ... Forum of Mediterranean Mycology Bulgarian Mycological Society Cvetomir M. Denchev Bulgarian Mycological Society was founded on the 19th of November 1998. It is the first Bulgarian mycological NGO. Institute of Botany of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences houses the new society. The purpose of the Bulgarian Mycological Society (BMS) is to promote the development of mycology in Bulgaria and the Balkan Peninsula, especially the investigations and conservation of the Bulgarian mycota. The members of BMS are researchers or Readers of mycology or phytopathology at the Institute of Botany and Institute of Forestry of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (Sofia), Faculty of Biology of Sofia University, and Agricultural University (Plovdiv). They have standing interest in various fields of modern mycology and forest phytopathology. They carry out jointly or independently intensive research on taxonomy, ecology, physiology and economic importance of the fungi, threatened fungi, biodiversity inventorying, computerization and indexing of bibliographic contributions to the Bulgarian mycota, environmental and industrial mycology, and on applied problems involving fungi such as crop protection, epidemiology caused by forest pathogens, rational utilization of fungi as natural resource, fungal acumulation of heavy metals, bioindication, monitoring of impact areas and pathological processes in the forest ecosystems, etc.

    96. MedBioWorld: Mycology
    Links to mycology. Dr. Fungus The World of fungi Fungal Databases SystematicBotany and mycology Fungal Genetics Stock Center
    http://www.medbioworld.com/both/assocdb/mycology.html
    Link to Us
    About Us

    Contact
    More than 32 million documents from 2,800 publications. Mycology Associations, Organizations, and Institutes
    American Mushroom Institute

    British Mycological Society

    Bulgarian Mycological Society

    Danish Mycological Society
    ...
    Zoosporic Fungi Online
    BioMed Central is an independent publishing house committed to providing free on-line access to peer-reviewed biomedical research. Health News Explorer Searching 8,000 Reuters Health articles using MedBioWorld's keyword search, context search and term-suggest technology. Search Now: Visit our sister site for family health resources More than 32 million documents from 2,800 publications. Home News Abstracts Free Articles ... Contact We subscribe to the HONcode principles. Verify here

    97. Welcome
    Landcare Research provides total mycology database research. fungi arecurrently allowed to have two different names under the International Code for
    http://nzfungi.landcareresearch.co.nz/html/mycology1.asp
    NZFUNGI - New Zealand Fungi
    (and Bacteria)
    Statistics
    29th August 2004 Names:
    Total 29,855; preferred 19,859 (synonyms 9,996); misapplied 748. Taxon Biostatus:
    Absent from NZ 8,860 (472 recorded in error); Present in NZ 9,114 (2,136 exotic; 941 of uncertain origin; 3,917 indigenous (956 endemic)) Fungal Conservation Status:
    Nationally Critical 47; Serious Decline 1; Gradual Decline 1; Sparse 2; Data Deficient 1,483 Fungal Herbarium Collections:
    Total 74,397 (1,204 Holotypes); from NZ 48,759; from Pacific Region 7,207 Living Collections:
    Total 14,289 (Fungi 5,746; Bacteria 8,543); from NZ 7,510 Literature References:
    Total 9,505 (indexing 22,402 fungal names and 2,422 host plant names) Descriptions:
    Total 1,947 (covering 1,827 names in 253 publications) Images:
    Total 3,314 (covering 1,642 species; including 1,520 figures/plates from publications) Keys:
    192 dichotomous keys for NZ species from 58 publications covering 1,342 species.

    98. NANCY S
    History of mycology in western North America with emphasis on studies on General botany, especially phenology, of native perennial herbaceous plants
    http://www.yachats.org/NWEBERCV.html
    NANCY S. WEBER
    Department of Forest Science,
    321 Richardson Hall
    Oregon State University
    Corvallis, OR 97331

    e-mail: webern@fsl.orst.edu
    telephone: (541) 737-6561
    FAX: (541) 737-1383
    Office: 045 FSL Education Ph.D., 1971, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Botany
    A.M., 1967, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Botany
    A.B., 1965, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Botany No degree, Ohio Wesleyan University, Botany Fields of Specialization Recreational and commercial utilization of morel mushrooms, mushrooms as special forest products History of mycology in western North America with emphasis on studies on macrofungi Development of computerized databases and ways to distribute, manage, query, and manipulate information for/on the World Wide Web General botany, especially phenology, of native perennial herbaceous plants Professional and Teaching and Research Experience Significant Scholarly Publications in Last Eight Years Weber, N.S. 1995. Selenaspora guernisacii (Pezizales, Sarcosomataceae), New to North America. Mycologia Weber, N.S., and W.C. Denison. 1995. Western American Pezizales.

    99. Mycology Online -- Fungal Jungle
    Clinical mycology Online presented by The Department of Bacteriology and fungal database provided by the Systemaric botany and mycology Laboratory.
    http://www.mycology.adelaide.edu.au/Fungal_Jungle/links.html
    The University of Adelaide Home Search Mycology Online ... Laboratory Methods
    THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
    AUSTRALIA 5005
    Contact:
    Dr David Ellis
    Email

    Telephone:
    Facsimile:
    Links to Other Mycology Sites:
    Societies
    International Society for Medical Mycology (ISHAM) Australasian Mycological Society American Society for Microbiology - Medical Mycology Australasian Plant Pathology Society ... Australasian Society for Infectious Diseases
    Medical Mycology Sites
    DoctorFungus this web site is owned by the DoctorFungus Corporation and is dedicated to timely dissemination of information about fungal infections via the world-wide web. Aspergillosis Web Site jointly sponsored by the University if Manchester, the Fungal Research Trust and Sequus, UK. This site includes an extensive reference database on Aspergillosis and information on laboratory procedures and treatment. Clinical Mycology Online presented by The Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, University of Helsinki, Finland. MiraVista Diagnostics this is Dr Joe Wheats site for Histoplasma - go here for antigen detection.
    General Mycology Sites
    International Mycologyical Institute culture idebtification service.

    100. Acalog4™ ACMS: Program Information
    botany, Plant Biology, mycology, including plant and fungal systematics, molecularand morphological phylogeny, reproductive biology,
    http://gradcatalog.umaine.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=17&poid=1532

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