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         Fungi Mycology Botany:     more books (100)
  1. Molecular Diversity and PCR-detection of Toxigenic Fusarium Species and Ochratoxigenic Fungi (Subcellular Biochemistry)
  2. Fundamentals of the Fungi, Fourth Edition by Elizabeth Moore-Landecker, 1996-02-12
  3. Fungi of Southern Australia by Neale Bougher, Katrina Syme, 1998-06
  4. Fungal Genetics: Principles and Practice (Mycology Series, Vol 13)
  5. Chemical Fungal Taxonomy by Frisvad, 1998-06-01
  6. The Deuteromycetes: Mitosporic Fungi : Classification and Generic Keys by E. Kiffer, Michel Morelet, 1999-11
  7. Fungal Physiology (Wiley Science Paperback Series) by David H. Griffin, 1996-06-22
  8. Introduction to Fungi by John Webster, 1980-06-30
  9. Fungi and Environmental Change (British Mycological Society Symposia)
  10. Fungi in Vegetation Science (Handbook of Vegetation Science)
  11. Shape and Form in Plants and Fungi, Volume 16, Sixteenth Edition (Linnean Society Symposium) by D. S. Ingram, 1994-07-26
  12. Ecophysiology of Fungi (Botantical Monographs) by R. C. Cooke, J. M. Whipps, 1993-08-27
  13. Tropical Mycology
  14. Fungi of the Hebrides by R. W. Dennis, 1986-12

21. Graduate Programs, Biol. Sci.
botany, Plant Biology, mycology, including plant transmission of plant viruses, microscopyand systematics of zoosporic fungi, mycology, physiology and
http://www.umesci.maine.edu/biology/graduate.htm
Graduate Programs
Department of Biological Sciences
Degrees
The Department of Biological Sciences offers graduate study leading to the following M.S. and Ph.D. degrees. Independent research under the direction of a faculty advisor is a major component of both the MS and PhD degrees. Certain of the Masters degrees have a non-thesis or literature-research option.

22. Gallery Of Louisiana Fungi
New species of Louisiana fungi. Journal of mycology 635. noted in Joseph Ewan,Bibliography of Louisiana botany, Southwestern Louisiana Journal 7 3233.
http://lsb380.plbio.lsu.edu/Gallery/gallery.html
LSU HomePage Dept. of Biological Sciences Mycology at LSU A. B. Langlois, early collector of Louisiana Fungi (Copy of contemporary photograph, Jim Weber)
Volutella ellisii , which was named for Ellis. One "fungus" described from bald cypress leaves currently in the Farlow Herbarium, Harvard University, is not a fungus but a gall. Publications
  • Langlois, A. B. Pilobolus Langlois, A. B. 1887. A new Volutella . Journal of Mycology 3:57. [ Volutella ellisii Langlois, A. B. 1887?. List of plants, native and introduced, of Plaquemines County, Louisiana. 4 p. [this may be an exchange list for correspondents, noted in Joseph Ewan, Bibliography of Louisiana Botany, Southwestern Louisiana Journal 7: 32-33. 1967] Ellis, J. B., and A. B. Langlois . 1890. New species of Louisiana Fungi. Journal of Mycology 6:35. [noted in Joseph Ewan, Bibliography of Louisiana Botany, Southwestern Louisiana Journal 7: 32-33. 1967] Langlois, A. B. 1896. Two lectures on botany. The Catholic Winter School, New Orleans. [Lecture 1 on Phanerogams, Lecture 2 on Cryptogams] Langlois, A. B.

23. Wits Botany Department - Mycology Research
Previous level Mycological research in the botany Department is carriedout in two main areas 1. Developmental aspects of fungi, including
http://www.wits.ac.za/fac/science/botany/mycolres.htm
Mycology Research
Department of Botany, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Previous level Mycological research in the Botany Department is carried out in two main areas:
1. Developmental aspects of fungi, including:
  • Physiology and nutrition of growth and sporulation of fungi.
  • Morphogy, structure and ultrastructure of spore formation.
2. Biology of fungal-plant interactions, including:
  • Physiology and biochemistry of ericoid mycorrhizas.
  • Management of vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhiza (VAM).
  • Fungal pathogenesis of cassava.
  • The biochemistry of disease resistance mechanisms in plants.
Current research projects include:
  • Conidiospores and conidiogenesis in selected species of Fungi Imperfecti from southern Africa.
  • Litter accumulation and decomposition in a Pinus patula plantation and the role of ectomycorrhizas in nutrient cycling.
  • Resistant and susceptible responses in Lagenaria mascarena to infection by powdery mildew under different conditions of light quality and intensity.
  • The biochemistry of wall-bound enzymes of ericoid mycorrhizal fungi.
Staff interested in this research area:
  • Dr Colin Straker
  • DR John Fletcher
Postgraduate research
  • MICHAEL BARRETO (MSc) Supervisors: Dr. Colin Straker and Professor Alan Critchley

24. School Of Botany@Unimelb - Mycology
The mycology Group in the School of botany is a centre for We also contribute tostudies on the prevalence of asthmacausing fungi in Melbourne homes.
http://www.botany.unimelb.edu.au/botanyunimelb/1pages/research/labs/mycology/myc
The Mycology Group
Mycology is the science of fungi However, biodeterioration caused by moulds and fungi is a serious problem, particularly in the wet tropics. In addition, fungi are serious pathogens of plants, causing estimated yield losses of 15-20% in the world's major food crops, as well as further losses due to postharvest decay and storage losses. Fungi are also pathogens of animals and humans, are important environmental allergens, and produce some of the most toxic and carcinogenic naturally-occurring poisons. Members of the group Current research Facilities Publications ... Link to overview of Plant defences against pathogens (1.5 MB pdf file)
Distribution: Global Last modified: 15 September, 2000
Authorised by: Head of Department
Email: ceobrien@unimelb.edu.au

25. Botany Homework Resources, Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh Resource Guide
WWW Virtual Library mycology Web resources on mushrooms and other fungi. International.botany Online (University of Hamburg) http//www.biologie.unihamburg.de
http://www.carnegielibrary.org/subject/homework/botany.html
Select Library Area: Ask a Librarian Careers at CLP Computer Classes Directions Employment Genealogy/History Homework Help Hours Kids' Site Library Subject Guide Locations Renew a Book Request a Book Research Databases Resource Guide Search Subject Departments Support the Library Teens' Site
Subject Search:
Web Site Catalog Internet Search
Database Search

Events Search

Resource Guide:
... Homework Resources
Botany
Pittsburgh Region Pennsylvania Nearby States United States ... International See also: Gardening and Botany
Library resources for Botany
Pittsburgh Region
Western Pennsylvania Mushroom Club
http://www.wpamushroomclub.org/
Interested in wild mushrooms but afraid to pick and eat them? Learn all about fungi with this local club.
Pennsylvania
Common Trees of Pennsylvania
If you need to collect leaves for your biology class, this website should help you identify them.
Nearby States
100 Common Spring Wildflowers
Selected Trees, Shrubs, and Herbaceous Plants that start blooming by May 15th in the Washington DC/Baltimore Area. From the DC Flora Project at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.
United States
The Algae Home Page Information about algae and its uses from the Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Department of Botany.

26. Big, Hairy Index To The WWW VL: Mycology
Cereal Disease Laboratory; ARS Collections of Entomopathogenic fungi (ARSEF); ARSPlant Protection Research Unit; ARS Systematic botany and mycology Lab; Arthur
http://biodiversity.uno.edu/~fungi/findex.html
find all words find any word boolean search
About this search
WWW VL: Mycology
The entire WWW VL About the WWW VL Mycology
HOME
ABOUT COLLECTIONS DIRECTORIES ... TEACHING INDEX
Big hairy index to the WWW Virtual Libary: Mycology
Hint: use your browser's FIND function to locate what you're looking for.

27. Systematic Botany And Mycology In Munich
Triebel, Dr. Dagmar, Ascomycetes; lichenicolous fungi; biodiversity informatics,triebel@bsm.mwn.de. Systematic botany and mycology in Munich.
http://www.botanik.biologie.uni-muenchen.de/botsyst/home.html

Seminars on Plant and Fungal Systematics
Index Collectorum (M)
Herbarium MSB
Botanische Staatssammlung ... Systematic Botany and Mycology in Munich Current and honorary staff Agerer, Prof. Dr. Reinhard Mycology myrrhmyk@lrz.uni-muenchen.de Bayer, Dr. Ehrentraud Flora of Chile (Alstroemeriaceae, Dioscoreaceae, Tecophilaeaceae) by@botmuc.de Bogner, Dr. h.c. Josef Evolution and systematics of Araceae jubab@extern.lrz-muenchen.de Bryophilous Ascomycetes doebbeler@lrz.uni-muenchen.de Ehrhart, Dr. Christine Taxonomy, morphology, ecology, and evolutionary relationships of neotropical Scrophulariaceae and Asteraceae ehrhart@lrz.uni-muenchen.de Erben, Dr. Matthias Angiosperms (Plumbaginaceae, Violaceae) erben@lrz.uni-muenchen.de Esser, Dr. Hans-Joachim Euphorbiaceae worldwide; Araliaceae and Rutaceae of southeastern Asia; flora of Thailand esser@bsm.mwn.de Facher, Dr. Eva Microscopy (REM) e.facher@lrz.uni-muenchen.de Orchids gerlach@extern.lrz-muenchen.de Angiosperms j.grau@lrz.uni-muenchen.de Angiosperms a.groeger@extern.lrz-muenchen.de Hertel, Prof. Dr. Hannes Lichens hertel@bsm.mwn.de

28. Botany Lab Help - Ex. 11
mycology at Humboldt State Univer, Mycological Resources, fungi www.hiddenforest.co.nz/fungi/class/basidiomycotina clampconnection http//www.botany.utoronto.ca
http://eve.kean.edu/~breid/Botany/botlab11.html
Botany Lab Help
BIO 2500 Principles of Botany - Kean University, Union, NJ
LAB 11 FUNGI
updated Nov. 6, 2003 About this site Links Assignment Reminder: Bring the two samples of fungi that you collected to the fungi lab ! Where to collect fungi? GENERAL Mushrooming Safety Introduction to the Fungi Fungus Kingdom General Mycology U. Arizona The Fungi Mycology.net - WWW Sites North American Mycological Assoc. Mycological Resources on the Internet Plant Pathology Diagnostic key The Fifth Kingdom chapter 4 ... fungi - Google images Mycology Online - medical Fungal infections Mycology at Humboldt State Univer Mycological Resources Fungi - fun facts the hidden kingdom ANIMATIONS animation - ascus from http://www.mycolog.com/CHAP4a.htm
animation
- conidia growth from http://www.mycolog.com/CHAP4a.htm
animation
- basidium http://www.mycolog.com/chapter5a.htm
clamp connection
- from http://www.hiddenforest.co.nz/fungi/class/basidiomycotina.htm
clamp connection
- http://www.botany.utoronto.ca/ResearchLabs/MallochLab/Malloch/Moulds/Classification.html HYPHAE (Nonseptate / Septate) Saprolegnia Coenocytic hyphae septate hyphae diagram ... septate - diagram + image Coenocytic hyphae septate hyphae septate - two images Nonseptate hyphae dolipore diagram septum - clamp septum ACRASIOMYCOTA Dictyostelium - images of stages
videos
slug Dictyostelium link to videos Dictyostelium - genome Dictyostelium Google images Dictyostelium Web server MYXOMYCOTA Slime Molds Myxomycetes PhysarumPlus Physarum - U. Wisc.

29. Botanical Society Of America: WEB Links
Systematic botany and mycology Labratory, US Department of Agriculture FrequentlyAsked Questions About fungi Systematic botany and mycology Labratory, US
http://www.botany.org/BSA-WEBLINKS/
@import "/templates/print.css";
Sugessted Web Links
Areas of Specialization in Botany
Anatomy
Scientific/Educational Sites
Ecology
Educational Sites
BSA Conservation Pages

Scientific Sites
The Cycad Pages - Ecology and Conservation
Scientific Societies
Ecological Society of America
Systematics
Scientific Sites
PlantSystematics.Org
Scientific Societies
American Society of Plant Taxonomists
Taxonomy
Scientific Sites
PlantSystematics.Org
Scientific Societies
American Society of Plant Taxonomists
Applied Botanical/Plant Sciences
Forestry
Scientific/Educational Sites
Forestry Index.net
Scientific Societies
Forest History Society
Plant Pathology
Sites for Young Botanists The aMaizing Plant Disease Game - Brithish Society for Plant Pathology Educational Sites Plant Pathology Education Center - American Society for Plant Pathology Scientific/Educational Sites Cooperative Research Centre for Tropical Plant Protection PLANT PATHOLOGY - IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST - University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Dept. Plant Pathology Scientific Societies American Phytopathological Society Australian Plant Pathology Society Brithish Society for Plant Pathology
Organismal Specialization in Botany
Bryology
Scientific/Educational Sites American Bryophyte Catalog - The New York Botanical Garden Bryology - Missouri Botanical Garden Bryophytes: registered specimens Collections Department of Cryptogamic Botany - Swedish Museum of Natural History The 2000 IUCN World Red List of Bryophytes Scientific Societies

30. Natural Selection: Subject Gateway To The Natural World
searched in sections vascular plants, bryophytes, fungi, lichens and is providedto a separate mycology database, also based at the UBC botany Department
http://nature.ac.uk/browse/579.50747.html
low graphics
Top
Mycology Specimen collections - Herbaria ... 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. Royal Ontario Museum. Cryptogamic Herbarium; Herbaria;
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. Many searchable databases are also included. Natural history museums; Field Museum;

31. Natural Selection: Subject Gateway To The Natural World
The Web site of the Chair of Special botany and mycology (= Spezielle Botanik Mykologie) describes Digital Exsiccate of fungi is a database available
http://nature.ac.uk/browse/579.16.html
low graphics
Top
Mycology
Beneficial fungi
... : a potential threat to our trees, woodland and heathland Produced by DEFRA (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), this plant health information sheet provides an overview of Phytophthora ramorum also known as 'sudden oak death'. It is "a serious fungal pathogen causing death of oaks and damage to a range of native plants in California, Oregon and Washington, USA and British Columbia, Canada". Although it has not yet been reported on Oaks in Europe, it has been discovered on other species, "principally on rhododendron and viburnum". This fact sheet including images covers symptoms, how it develops and spreads, and what is being done in the UK. Contact details to report suspected cases are provided.
Aboriginal use of fungi
Taken from the article written by Arpad Kalotas and published in Volume 1B of 'Fungi of Australia', this report with colour photographs, provides an excellent source of information on the use of fungi by Australian Aboriginals. Links within the text lead to further information on some of the fungi. This page is part of the Fungi Web site hosted by the Australian National Botanic Gardens. Ethnobotany; Mycology; Folklore; Aboriginal Australians; Fungi;

32. History Of Mycology In The United States
Described several new fungi (Agarics) in Reports of botany Department, CornellUniversity Agaricaceae and systematic mycology; had several students.
http://www.towson.edu/~wubah/mycology/History of mycology the US.htm
History of mycology in the United States Rev. Lewis D. von Schweinitz (1780-1834) Collected fungi from north Carolina and Pennsylvania; described 2000 new species and followed Fries' system Had a microscope and provided important contributions Rev. Moses A. Curtis (1808-1872) Born and lived in N. Carolina Collected samples and sent them to M.J. Berkeley (new names "B and C") Published 2 contributions: Philadelphia Academy of Science Most of his collections are in British museums; some are at the Farlow Herbarium at Harvard University Ezra Michener (1794-1887) Collected in southeastern Pennsylvania (Chester County): listed 1200 species Sent may fungi to Berkeley; rearranged herbarium of von Schweinitz at the Phil. Academy of Science His collection is at the USDA Mycological Herbarium Henry W. Ravenel (1814-1887) South Carolinian; sent collections to Berkeley ("B and Rav.") Published Fungi Caroliani Exsiccati (1853-60) and Fungi Americani Exsiccati Charles Horton Peck (1833-1917) Botanist at New York Museum at Albany (1867-1915) Described several new fungi (Agarics) in Reports of the State Botanist from 1871-1913 Made mistakes in identification and taxonomy because most of the earlier work had been done in Europe George F. Atkinson (1854-1918)

33. HISTORY OF MYCOLOGY
mycology in England; wrote over 400 mycology papers and named approximately 6000species of fungi. Wrote Introduction to Cryptogamic botany (1857) and
http://www.towson.edu/~wubah/mycology/European mycological history.htm
HISTORY OF MYCOLOGY
Mycology: From Mykes = mushroom and logos =discourse
Systematic study of fungi is only about 250 years old: predates bacteriology
Legends Ancient Egyptians : Considered biological fermentation (yeast) as the gift of their god Osiris to mankind Greeks : Worshipped Dionysus (god of wine) and celebrated Dionysia Romans : Worshipped Bacchus (god of wine) and attributed the appearance of mushrooms to lightning hurled by Jupiter to earth Mexican and Guatamelan Indians : Believe appearance of fly agaric ( Amanita muscaria ) is somehow correlated to with thunder and lightning. The legend of the Mycenean civilization Three and half million years ago, the Greek hero Perseus accidentally killed his grandfather, Acrisius , to fulfill an oracle. When Perseus returned to Argos, ashamed of the homicide, he traded kingdoms with Megapenthes , son of Proetus Perseus named his new kingdom Mycenae because the cap ( mykes ) of his scabbard had fallen off at a spot that he regarded as a sign to found a city. Alternative legend states that, Perseus, being thirsty, cut a mushroom (mykes) and drank the water flowing from it and hence named his new kingdom Mycenae. th Century Pier Antonio Micheli (1679-1737) The founder of systematic study of fungi (science of mycology) 1729 published Nova Plantarum Genera , in which the first research on fungi were included.

34. Mycology
The Systematic botany and mycology Laboratory (SBML The SBML aims to increase theknowledge and application of the systematics of fungi and vascular plants
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: 03 Jun 2004

35. Diversity Of Life Web Index
and mycology USDA USDA s Systematic botany and mycology Laboratory, your sourcefor taxonomic and nomenclatural information on plants and fungi, host-fungus
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.

36. Botany Mycology - Online Textbooks
sitemapindex.html botany mycology. 1 Contents Page Chapter 7 Chapter8 Chapter 9 Chapter 8. mycology ~ The fungi. Introduction.
http://online-textbooks.fablis.com/index.php/Botany_Mycology
Fablis Online Textbooks Botany Mycology
Botany Mycology
Contents Page Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 8. Mycology ~ The Fungi
Introduction
Fruiting bodies of a bracket fungus on a Christmasberry log
Click to enlarge picture The Fungi (singular is fungus ) are a large group of organisms treated within the science of Botany, but not really "plants" in the usual sense of the term. The Fungi are ranked as a kingdom within the Domain Eukaryota . That is, they have eukaryotic cells with distinct nuclei, although in some species divisions between nucleated "cells" are sparse. However, they all lack chlorophyll, and the species are either saprophytic or parasitic. Included within the Fungi are the well known mushrooms, but the group also includes many microscopic forms, and fungi inhabit every environment on earth, perhaps second only to the bacteria (Chapter 7) in distribution.

37. Systemic Botany And Mycology Laboratory-Research Into The Systemics Of Fungi And
Systemic botany and mycology Laboratory Research into the systemics of fungi andvascular plants More information is available at nt.arsgrin.gov/SBMLWeb
http://www.scitechresources.gov/Results/show_result.php?rec=1950

38. Water Colours Of Fungi By Konrad Schieferdecker - About
outstanding personal interest was focussed on the study of mycology, botany as well desMuseums zu Hildesheim , including the descriptions of some fungi new to
http://141.84.65.132/BSM-Mycology/Collections/Icones/Schieferdecker/SchiefAbout.
About "Water Colours of Fungi by Konrad Schieferdecker"
The Artist and the Virtual Gallery Konrad Schieferdecker was born on January 24th, 1902 in Friedrichsbrunn/ Harz (Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany). He studied geodesy at the College of Agriculture in Berlin. In 1925, K. Schieferdecker got a position as surveyor in Hildesheim (Niedersachsen, Germany), where he lived until his death on December 23th, 1965. For 40 years, his outstanding personal interest was focussed on the study of mycology, botany as well as numismatics and prehistory of the region of Hildesheim. He published a number of scientific contributions on various subjects, mainly in the "Zeitschrift des Museums zu Hildesheim", including the descriptions of some fungi new to science. K. Schieferdecker maintained a lively scientific exchange of ideas with the famous mycologist W. Kirschstein (Berlin) until the death of the latter in 1946. To honour the collector, Kirschstein (1944) described Lachnea schieferdeckeri Kirschst. . There are 19 papers of Schieferdecker with mycological content (For references see DALI ). A bibliography was presented by

39. MedBioWorld: Mycology
Cultures Clinical mycology Online Dictionary of the fungi Dr. Fungus The World offungi Fungal Databases Systematic botany and mycology Fungal Genetics Stock
http://www.sciencekomm.at/both/assocdb/mycology.html
Link to Us
About Us

Contact
More than 28 million documents from 2,600 publications. Mycology Associations, Organizations, and Institutes
American Mushroom Institute

British Mycological Society

Bulgarian Mycological Society

Danish Mycological Society
...
Zoosporic Fungi Online
Get your .md top level domain name
Source Type: Documents
(from Newspapers, Magazines, Journals, Transcripts and Books) Reference
(Encyclopedias, Dictionaries and Almanacs) Images and Maps Search For: Home News Abstracts Free Articles ... Contact We subscribe to the HONcode principles. Verify here

40. Botany Libraries Cryptogamic Links
of fungi, ways to teach mycology using the internet, and the famous Fungus of theMonth. Introductory mycology by Dr. Joey Spatafora of the Dept. of botany
http://www.huh.harvard.edu/libraries/cryptogamic.htm
Electronic Journals
Taxonomy and Nomenclature

Bryophytes

Green Algae
...
Archival Collections

Cryptogamic Links
Taxonomy and Nomenclature Related Glossaries and Sites
Bryological Glossary, Missouri Botanical Garden A Cumulative Checklist for the Lichen-forming, Lichenicolous and Allied Fungi of the Continental United States and Canada by Theodore L. Esslinger Index of Fungi Indices Nominum Supragenericorum Plantarum Vascularium
Fungi and unrelated fungal-like organisms
Fungi
Family Name Database This is a list of fungal family names with nomenclatural and bibliographic information. Authors of Fungal Names Authors of Fungal Names was published in 1992 as a supplement to the Index of Fungi. It is now out of print and also out of date. During the intervening 10 years details of about 2000 new fungal name authors have been accumulated, during the production of the Index of Fungi and also during the augmentation of the data available in IndexFungorum. IndexFungorum; aka funindex contains over 345,000 names of fungi (including yeast, lichens, chromistan fungi, protozoan fungi and fossil forms) at species level and below derived from a number of published lists including Saccardo's Sylloge Fungorum (contributed by SBML, USDA), Petrak's Lists, Saccardo's Omissions, Lamb's Index, Zahlbruckner's Catalogue of Lichens (comprehensive for names at species level only but with an increasing number of names of infraspecific taxa) and CABI's Index of Fungi. Bibliography of Systematic Mycology provides a survey of the literature encompassing the biodiversity, classification, distribution, evolution, identification, nomenclature, phylogeny, systematics and taxonomy of fungi (including those groups traditionally treated as fungi but now better classified in other kingdoms).

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