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         Fungi:     more books (101)
  1. Morphology of Plants and Fungi by Harold C. Bold, Constantine J. Alexopoulos, et all 1987-03
  2. Fungi; their nature and uses by M C. b. 1825 Cooke, M J. 1803-1889 Berkeley, 2010-08-18
  3. The Fungus Link: An Introduction to Fungal Disease, Including the Initial Phase Diet by Doug A. Kaufmann, 2001-12
  4. Fungi from Yuggoth and Other Poems by H. P Lovecraft, 1971-02
  5. Microorganisms, Fungi, and Plants (Holt Science & Technology) by Katy Z. Allen, Linda R. Berg, 2007-01-31
  6. Treasures from the Kingdom of Fungi: Featuring Photographs of Mushrooms and Other Fungi from Around the World
  7. Molecular and Cell Biology Methods for Fungi (Methods in Molecular Biology)
  8. Detection of Bacteria, Viruses, Parasites and Fungi: Bioterrorism Prevention (NATO Science for Peace and Security Series A: Chemistry and Biology)
  9. Non-Timber Forest Products: Medicinal Herbs, Fungi, Edible Fruits and Nuts, and Other Natural Products from the Forest
  10. Morphology and Taxonomy of Fungi by Ernest A. Bessey, 1964-06
  11. Instant Guide to Mushrooms & Other Fungi (Instant Guides) by Eleanor Lawrence, Sue Harniess, 2003-05-06
  12. Integrated Management of Diseases Caused by Fungi, Phytoplasma and Bacteria (Integrated Management of Plant Pests and Diseases)
  13. Decomposition: Fungi-Inspired Poems by Anthology, 2010-04-01
  14. Mushrooms and Other Common Fungi of the San Francisco Bay Region by robert orr, 1968-01-01

41. Environmental Microbiology Laboratory
Definitions References Commentary Home Services Sampling fungi Store Lab About Us Contact. ©2008 EMLab P K Conditions of Use.
http://www.emlab.com/app/fungi/Fungi.po
@import "../../s/web.css"; An index of some commonly encountered fungal genera Acremonium to Curvularia Neosartorya to Rusts Acremonium sp.
Alternaria sp.

Amerospores

Amphobotrys sp.
...
Rusts

Dactylaria to Myxotrichum Sartorya to Zygosporium Dactylaria sp.
Dicyma sp.

Doratomyces sp.

Drechslera, Bipolaris, and Exserohilum group
...
Conditions of Use

42. Secrets Of Cooperation Between Trees And Fungi Revealed
Mar 6, 2008 Plants gained their ancestral toehold on dry land with considerable help from their fungal friends. Now, millennia later, that partnership
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/03/080305144228.htm
Science News
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Secrets Of Cooperation Between Trees And Fungi Revealed
ScienceDaily (Mar. 6, 2008) See also: These prospects stem from the genome analysis of the symbiotic fungus Laccaria bicolor, generated by the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI) and collaborators from INRA, the National Institute for Agricultural Research in Nancy, France, and published March 6 in the journal Nature. This international team effort also involved contributions from 16 institutions, including Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Ghent University, Belgium; Lund University, Sweden; Goettingen University, Germany; CNRS-Aix-Marseille University, France; Nancy University, France; and the University of Alabama, Huntsville. In a manner of speaking, trees are the lungs of the earth. They draw CO from the atmosphere and convert it into sugars, which then become a source of energy. In the process they breathe O back into the atmosphere. This "green" production of biomass trees account for 90% of the planet's land-based biomass is a major influence on the health of our planet. Trees' ability to generate large amounts of biomass or store carbon is underpinned by their interactions with soil microbes known as mycorrhizal fungi, which excel at procuring necessary, but scarce, nutrients such as phosphate and nitrogen. Most of these nutrients are transferred to the growing tree. When Laccaria bicolor establishes a partnership with plant roots, a mycorrhizal root is created. The fungus within the root is protected from competition with other soil microbes and gains preferential access to carbohydrates within the plant. Thus, the mutualistic relationship is established.

43. Mechanisms Of Plant-fungi Symbiosis Characterized By DOE Joint
Plants gained their ancestral toehold on dry land with considerable help from their fungal friends. Now, millennia later, that partnership is being
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2008-03/dgi-mop030408.php

44. Descriptions Of Fungi And Bacteria
s of fungi and Bacteria are designed for use by plant pathologists and veterinary and medical mycologists to allow identification of......The
http://www.cababstractsplus.org/DFB/
if(popupBlocker)alert('Warning: To view the abstracts database, you should not use a pop-up blocker on this site') Main Menu Site Search Abstracts Database
Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria: Online
The Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria are designed for use by plant pathologists and veterinary and medical mycologists. They provide integrated information to allow identification / confirmation of identity of significant species, along with related information on pathology or other economic significance. The Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria were initiated in 1964, and more than 1600 sheets have been issued, each devoted to a single species. Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria are produced by CABI Bioscience. Each sheet is written by an authority on that particular organism. Because of this expert authorship Descriptions of Fungi and Bacteria are widely regarded as official definitions of the species concerned. A large proportion of the illustrations and photos are unique to DFB and a substantial number of species are not adequately illustrated elsewhere. Username: Password:
THE SCIENCE
THE SEARCH
THE SOLUTION
CAB International
Technical Info Feedback Other CABI Sites

45. Far West Fungi
Far West fungi is a onestop destination for mushrooms. The shop carries a wide selection of culinary mushrooms (both fresh and dried), medicinal mushroom
http://www.ferrybuildingmarketplace.com/farwest_fungi.php
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46. Botany Photo Of The Day: Fungi And Slime Molds Archives
I study chytrid fungi, microscopic fungi that mainly live in freshwater. I especially focus on the local chytrids that parasitize freshwater microscopic
http://www.ubcbotanicalgarden.org/potd/fungi_and_slime_molds/
Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.
Fungi and Slime Molds
March 11, 2008
Chytriomyces sp.
The series for UBC Research Week continues. Today's write-up and photos are courtesy of Toko Mori. Toko writes: My name is Toko Mori, a first-year graduate student in the Berbee Lab at the University of British Columbia. I study chytrid fungi, microscopic fungi that mainly live in freshwater. I especially focus on the local chytrids that parasitize freshwater microscopic algae. My long-term research goal is to create a tree of life of chytrids that parasitize algae and to see if there is any coevolutionary relationship between the species of parasitic chytrids and those of their host algae. I collected this chytrid on an alga, Vaucheria , from Burnaby Lake (Burnaby, BC) in August 2007. I have cultured it on agar and also co-cultured it with Vaucheria since then. Since it seems that this is the first entry of chytrids in the Botany Photo of the Day, let me explain what they are. Chytrids are fungi, although they look quite different from mushrooms and molds, which we often think of as fungi. There are about one thousand species of chytrids which form the Phylum Chytridiomycota . Being the only group of fungi which reproduce by motile cells called zoospores (shown in picture 4), chytrids are considered to have diverged from the other fungi very early in their evolutionary history. Having motile spores gives them reproductive advantage in water. However, this is a double-edged sword; chytrids are unable to reproduce without moisture and thus bound to aquatic habitats.

47. Florida Fungi Home Page
Welcome to the Florida fungi Resources Site. Go ahead . . . . jump in.
http://www.polaris.net/~annep/FloridaFungi/
Go ahead . . . . jump in.

48. Wood Decay Fungi
Identification keys, pictures, and descriptions of fungi and mushrooms that grow on the living and dead wood of trees and including edible, poisonous,
http://www.messiah.edu/Oakes/fungi_on_wood/
Fungi Growing on Wood
Keys, photographs, and descriptions of macroscopic fungi utilizing wood as a substrate in
the Northeast United States by Gary Emberger Introduction Shape Key Species List

49. NAMA: Teaching About Fungi
Teaching About fungi Grades K12. Collected by NAMA Education Committe chairperson. Sondra Sheine PO Box 81640 Rochester, Michigan 48308-1640
http://www.namyco.org/education/k-12.html
Manual for Teachers and Naturalists
Teaching About Fungi: Grades K-12
Collected by NAMA Education Committe chairperson: Sondra Sheine
PO Box 81640
Rochester, Michigan 48308-1640
ssheine@aol.com
Please send Sondra Sheine any teaching materials that you have used with children to add to this material. Credit for some of the handouts to Caryl Widderson, (Maine Mycological Association), and the Thorncrag Bird Sanctuary in Maine. Also credit to Jean-Paul Latil, (Long Island Mycological Club), for his handout, to Louise Freedman for Making Yeast Bread and the drawings for the Life Cycles of Fungi, and to Bill Freedman for co-authoring The Fungal Kingdom.
Table of Contents

50. General Microbiology/Microorganisms/Eukaryotes/Fungi: By Microbes.info
fungi microbiology resources by microbes.info microbiology information resources and links on microorganisms.
http://www.microbes.info/resources/General_Microbiology/Microorganisms/Eukaryote
Resources General Microbiology Microorganisms Eukaryotes : Fungi Categories:
Ascomycota
Basidiomycota Microsporidia Zygomycota Links:
  • Coprinus site: all about Inkcaps
    By Kees Uljé.
    http://www.homepages.hetnet.nl/~idakees/
  • Cornell Center for Fungal Biology
    CCFB promotes the study and teaching of fungi, lichens etc.
    http://ccfb.cornell.edu/
  • CORTBASE
    A nomenclatural database of corticioid fungi (Hymenomycetes).
    http://www.systbot.gu.se/database/cortbase/cortbase.html
  • Doctor Fungus An on-line reference to all things mycological! Gives information about fungal infections and mycology in general. This web site is dedicated to timely dissemination of information about fungal infections via the world-wide web. http://www.doctorfungus.org/
  • Fungal Genetics Stock Center A resource available to the Fungal Genetics research community and to educational and research organizations in general. http://www.fgsc.net/
  • Fungal Mitochondrial Genome Project (FMGP) The goals of FMGP are to (i) sequence complete mitochondrial genomes from all major fungal lineages, (ii) infer a robust fungal phylogeny, (iii) define the origin of the fungi, their protistan ancestors, and their specific phylogenetic link to the animals, (iv) investigate mitochondrial gene expression, introns, RNAse P RNA structures, mobile elements ... http://megasun.bch.umontreal.ca/People/lang/FMGP/FMGP.html

51. PLoS Biology - The Evolution Of Combinatorial Gene Regulation In Fungi
Citation Tuch BB, Galgoczy DJ, Hernday AD, Li H, Johnson AD (2008) The Evolution of Combinatorial Gene Regulation in fungi. PLoS Biol 6(2) e38
http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journ

52. BiologyBrowser - Biology Resources By Organism
The checklist was compiled from records of Arizona fungi in scientific publications or herbarium databases. Additional records were obtained from a physical
http://www.biologybrowser.org/bb/Organism/Fungi/
Please enable your browser's JavaScript Search BiologyBrowser Organism (ex. fungi)
Subject (ex. biodiversity)
Geography (region)
All Counts of New and Changed Names Reported in Zoological Record Indicates trends in assigning names to new animals by taxonomists. Search the Index to Organism Names
The Index to Organism Names project uses name data from the resources of BIOSIS and other collaborating organizations. Conferences
Nomenclatural Glossary for Zoology

An alphabetical list of specialist terms.
For basic answers to who's who in the Animal Kingdom.
Main Category: Organism
Home Organism Fungi
Sub-Categories
Ascomycetes
Basidiomycetes

Fungi Imperfecti or Deuteromycetes

Myxophyta
... Phycomycetes
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Any Term All Terms Entire collection This Category Only Within results Results 1 - 10 of at least 301
  • A Cumulative Checklist for the Lichen-forming, Lichenicolous and Allied Fungi of the Continental United States and Canada
  • 53. Botanical.com - A Modern Herbal | Fungi
    fungi are those plants which are colourless; they have no green chlorophyll within them, and it is this green substance which enables the higher plants to
    http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/f/fungi-37.html
    Fungi
    Fungi are those plants which are colourless; they have no green chlorophyll within them, and it is this green substance which enables the higher plants to build up, under the influence of sunlight, the starches and sugars which ultimately form our food. Having no chlorophyll, fungi cannot use the energy of the sun and must therefore adopt another method of life. They either live as parasites on other living plants or animals, or they live on decaying matter. In either case they derive their energy by breaking up highly complex substances and, when these are broken up in the living plant, the living plant suffers. Many Fungi, such as the bacteria, are microscopic; others form visible growths, from moulds and mildews to the familiar mushroom and toadstools they in crease in size and conspicuousness. Fungi differ from flowering plants in theirchemical influence upon the air. They absorb oxygen and exhale carbonic acid, performing the same office in this respect as animals, which they most resemble in chemical composition. The odours they emit in decay are more like putrescent animal than vegetable matter. Some species, e.g., the Stinkhorns, emit a most intolerably offensive stench; others, on the contrary, are very agreeable to the smell and some 'toadstools' acquire in drying a fine aroma. They are quite as variable to the taste. Numerically, Fungi rank next to flowering plants and in many portions of the globe far exceed them. In Great Britain, indeed, we have just over 5,000 species of Fungi, which number exceeds that of our flowering plants, ferns, mosses, lichens and algae all added together.

    54. Index.gif
    invam.caf.wvu.edu/ 15k - Cached - Similar pages fungi Make Biodiesel Efficiently at Room Temperature Wired Scientists at the Indian Institute of Chemical Technology have found a much better way to make biodiesel. Their new method could lower the cost and increase
    http://invam.caf.wvu.edu/

    55. World Of Fungi Home Page - Where Mycology Starts
    A major mycological resource combining fungal biology from general interest to frontline science.
    http://www.world-of-fungi.org/

    56. Soil Fungi | NRCS SQ
    fungi are microscopic cells that usually grow as long threads or strands called hyphae, which push their way between soil particles, roots, and rocks.
    http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/concepts/soil_biology/fungi.html

    Soils Home
    Soil Quality SQ Concepts Soil Organic Matter ... Site Map Search Soil Quality All Soils All NRCS Sites for
    Soil Quality Concepts
    Soil Biology
    The Soil Biology Primer
    Chapter 4: SOIL FUNGI
    By Elaine R. Ingham THE LIVING SOIL: FUNGI Fungi are microscopic cells that usually grow as long threads or strands called hyphae, which push their way between soil particles, roots, and rocks. Hyphae are usually only several thousandths of an inch (a few micrometers) in diameter. A single hyphae can span in length from a few cells to many yards. A few fungi, such as yeast, are single cells. Hyphae sometimes group into masses called mycelium or thick, cord-like “rhizomorphs” that look like roots. Fungal fruiting structures (mushrooms) are made of hyphal strands, spores, and some special structures like gills on which spores form. (See figure) A single individual fungus can include many fruiting bodies scattered across an area as large as a baseball diamond. Fungi perform important services related to water dynamics, nutrient cycling, and disease suppression. Along with bacteria, fungi are important as decomposers in the soil food web. They convert hard-to-digest organic material into forms that other organisms can use. Fungal hyphae physically bind soil particles together, creating stable aggregates that help increase water infiltration and soil water holding capacity.

    57. Kingdom Of Fungi Home Page
    Taylor Lockwood s mushroom creations and information.
    http://www.kingdomoffungi.com/
    KINGDOM of FUNGI.COM - HOME FUNGIPHOTO.COM - MUSHROOM STOCK PHOTOGRAPHY TAYLOR LOCKWOOD.COM GO TO PRODUCT LIST MUSHROOM VIDEOS ...
    USA
    email:
    Taylor's Second Book:

    Chasing the Rain

    HAS ARRIVED! CLICK HERE TO VIEW

    Price: $29.95
    Chasing the Rain
    Mousepads!
    "Treasures" Book
    Gallery
    Prints Placemats Treasures DVD Posters

    58. Science Fair Projects With Mushrooms And Fungi
    Science fair project ideas using mushroom cultures.
    http://www.mycomasters.com/Science-fair-projects.html
    Science fair project ideas using mushrooms and fungi
    Mushroom growing offers endless possibilities for science projects and experiments. Below I offer a few ideas, and there are links at the bottom to my pages offering the peroxide-in-mushroom-growing manual, Growing Mushrooms the Easy Way, Home Mushroom Cultivation with Hydrogen Peroxide Basics of Mushroom growing : Read this for an overview of the process.
    Winners
    : Take a look at actual winning science projects sent by students. Project using mushroom kits
    Here are some projects you can do, starting with a mushroom kit (or a pair of kits, one for a control). A mushroom kit is ready to start forming mushrooms when you receive it. But remember to plan ahead and give yourself enough time for the mushrooms to growthis usually takes two to three weeks. (Sorry, I am no longer selling kitssee my Links page for other suppliers). With a kit, you can test things like:
  • What happens to mushrooms grown with no light, or too much light? No moisture, or too much moisture? No fresh air?
  • What color of light has the most positive effect on mushroom formation?
  • 59. Magnaporthe Grisea Database
    Home Data Genomes Magnaporthe grisea Home. Home News Info Download BLAST Regions Feature Search Gene Index Genetic Maps FAQ
    http://www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/fungi/magnaporthe/
    @import "http://www.broad.mit.edu/css/fonts.css"; @import "http://www.broad.mit.edu/css/leftnav.css"; @import "http://www.broad.mit.edu/css/structure.css"; Login Home Data Genomes ... Magnaporthe grisea Home Home News Info Download ... Links
    Magnaporthe grisea Database
    Please note that there is a new assembly and gene set prediction for M. grisea . Click here for details.
    Project What's New? Recently updated site content Project Information Description and background information on the sequencing project Genome Sequence Magnaporthe grisea Release 5 genome sequence and annotation now available Download Sequence Download sequence, genes, markers and other genome data BLAST Search Find similarities to other sequences Browse Regions Retrieve DNA, find clones, and graphically view sequence regions Feature Search Search and view annotated features on the sequence (Genetic markers, precomputed BLASTX and BLASTN alignments) Genetic Map View the alignment of the genetic and physical maps Genes Find genes by a variety of methods Genome Statistics View basic statistics about genome size, gene density, etc

    60. Mycrorrhizae Part 1
    Photographs of a number of fungal species which associate with plants to their mutual benefit.
    http://plantbio.berkeley.edu/~bruns/tour/fungi2.html
    Mycorrhizal Fungi
    Thelephoroid#2 mycorrhizae Rhizopogon bishop pine mycorrhizae Russula amoenolens mycorrhiza one of the most common associates of bishop pine Thelephoroid #2 ectomycorrhizae ectomycorrhizae of bishop pine another Thelephoroid ectomycorrhizae on Douglas-fir double colonization by Tomentella sublilicina and Thelephoroid#2 on Douglas-fir Russula amoenolens mycorrhizae bishop pine root mycorrhizae on bishop pine (left) and douglas fir (right) showing 3 different mycorrhizal morphotypes in close proximity: Rhizopogon (white), Thelephoroid#2 (dark brown) and Russula amoenolens (yellow). of an unknown boletoid fungus on bishop pine Thelephoroid mycorrhiza Suillus pungens mycorrhizae Cenoccocum mycorrhizae infecting an orchid; not an ectomycorrhizae generally mycorrhizae of this species are very hard to find (black) with an unknown mycorrhizae on the same root
    Pterospora mycorrhizae
    The tour continues with some additional photos of mycorrhizal fungi (part 2). the beginning sample results point reyes fire introduction limantour road disturbance plots bp plots species diversity plots construction post fire - sd plots post fire - bp plots sierra nevada 1995 sierra july 1998 sierra august 1999 sierra fowm 2000 santa rosa island 2001 blodgett 2002 tomales point 2004 blodgett 2004 mclaughlin 2006 mushrooms mycorrhizae part I mycorrhizae part II rust fungi post fire fungi Bruns Lab home Last updated: Friday April 7, 2000

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