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         Fungi:     more books (101)
  1. Metal Ions in Fungi (Mycology)
  2. List of the Water-Color Drawings of Fungi by Anonymous, 2010-04-02
  3. Parasitic fungi of Illinois / by T.J. Burrill by Thomas J. 1839-1916 Burrill, F S. 1856-1929 Earle, 2010-09-08

141. FUNGI DE LA RIOJA
Translate this page fungi DE LA RIOJA © Agustín Caballero Moreno 2000 acam0032@alerce.pntic.mec.esaguscamo@teleline.es. fungi SETAS HONGOS. BOLETS COGUMELOS PILZE.
http://inicia.es/de/aguscamo/
FUNGI DE LA RIOJA
Agustín Caballero Moreno 2000
acam0032@alerce.pntic.mec.es

aguscamo@teleline.es
FUNGI SETAS HONGOS BOLETS COGUMELOS PILZE MUSHROOMS CHAMPIGNONS SETAS FUNGHI FUNGUS HONGOS

142. HOME
LA Testing Laboratory provides microbiological analysis of fungi and bacteria in spore traps, bulk samples, tape lifts, swabs and agar plates. Sampling equipment rentals and sampling supplies available.
http://www.latesting.com
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LA Testing prides itself on providing accurate, dependable data, in a timely, cost effective manner. Call us toll free. Microbial
Sampling
Guide Sampling Media Guide For Culture of Microorganisms ...
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143. Fungus Facts
What are fungi, where do they come from and what good do they do? What sthe difference Which of the wild fungi are good to eat? And what is
http://www.first-nature.com/fungi/facts/
Fact and Fiction
Take me to... FACT CENTRE Safety first What are fungi? Toadstool or Mushroom? Myth and reality See fungi grow Test your knowledge Trees and fungi Orchids and fungi Poisonous fungi Hallucinogens Imposters HOME BASE What are fungi, where do they come from and what good do they do? What's the difference between a toadstool and a mushroom? Which of the wild fungi are good to eat? And what is the truth about poisonous and hallucinogenic fungi? Find the answers to all these questions and lots more here...
Fungi Reptiles Bats Land Mammals ... Email us
Updated:
18 December 2001

144. Study Bacteria, Fungi May Bug Termites To Death
CNN
http://cnn.com/2002/TECH/science/04/12/termites.reut/index.html

145. The Fungal Jungal; Mushroom & Fungi Identification And Information
Fungal Jungal educates about mushroom harvest, identification and fungi habitat preservation. A Western Montana Mycological Association nonprofit publication. Comprehensive website, photos.
http://www.fungaljungal.org
Newsletter
Spring 2004
Field Notes
Spring 2004
... The Archives
past newsletters
and other info Morels:
Information, Harvest, Research , and Fire Ecology What's Happening
Calendar
WMMA Social Pages Ethical Harvesting ... Recipe Roundup and Mushroom Taste Tests
Food tastes better with mushrooms Educational Mushroom Trunk
A program for teachers Share this with your favorite educator Montana Truffles Outside Magazine
Does the Mushroom Love Its Plucker? Oyster mushroom project workshops
Workshop report WMMA Area Representatives Mushroom Links Home
Home of the Western Montana Mycological Association Our mission: "To further educate people about fungi, edible and otherwise, To encourage sustainable and responsible mushroom harvest, and preserve mushroom habitat.

146. First Nature Fungus Guide
This section of the First Nature website is about mushrooms and toadstools andthe many other beautiful and fascinating fungi in Nature s least understood
http://www.first-nature.com/fungi/
Take me to... Fungi Multimedia Guide to Fungi Reptiles Amphibians Bats Fishes Insects Birds Mammals Trees Wild Flowers Home Base This section of the First Nature website is about mushrooms and toadstools and the many other beautiful and fascinating fungi in Nature's least understood kingdom. Multimedia Guide to Fungi: Available Now
Fungi ... Email us
Updated:
28 June 2002

147. Forest Fungi Of New Zealand
Photographs and information on New Zealand fungi now also including slime moulds
http://fungi.co.nz/forest

148. Colour Guide Of Fungi
Color Guide of fungi. Színes gombakalauz. Ascomycetes Tömlôs gombák Basidiomycetes- Bazidiumos gombák Aphyllophorales Polyporales Boletales Agaricales
http://spike.fa.gau.hu/fungi/guide.html
Color Guide of Fungi
Aphyllophorales
Polyporales

Boletales

Agaricales

Russulales
Gasteromycetales

149. Chapter 3b  Zygomycota
Illustrated outline of the classification of the Zygomycota, with 26 pictures and explanatory text.
http://www.mycolog.com/CHAP3b.htm
The Fifth Kingdom - Chapter 3 B Kingdom Eumycota Phylum 2 - Zygomycota Conjugating Fungi Hotlinks to : Class Zygomycetes
Orders Mucorales Entomophthorales Zoopagales Kickxellales
and Class Trichomycetes
and
Phylum 3 - Glomeromycota arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi Hotlink to Class Glomeromycetes
Introduction The second eumycotan phylum is the Zygomycota . This phylum contains two classes, class Zygomycetes and class Trichomycetes . Since most Trichomycetes are parasites or commensals inside the guts of living arthropods, they are only a footnote, albeit a fascinating one, to this chapter. Basic features Although the class Zygomycetes contains only about 1% of the known species of fungi, its members are distinctive, and some of them are common, successful, fast-growing, primary colonizers of substrates containing accessible carbon sources like sugar or starch. Others are specialized parasites. Zygosporangia The name of the class is derived from the way in which they reproduce sexually by the physical blending - fusion or conjugation - of morphologically similar gametangia to form a zygosporangium (the teleomorphic phase). 'Zygos' is Greek for a yoke or joining. The gametangia arise from hyphae of a single mycelium in homothallic species, or from different but sexually compatible mycelia in heterothallic species. Zygosporangia usually develop thick walls, and act as resting spores.

150. Zen's WNC Nature Notebook - Fungi Index
fungi INDEX. fungi. Since fungi identification is a tricky business, i m goingto break them down only by major category rather than by species.
http://www.main.nc.us/naturenotebook/fungiindex.html
FUNGI INDEX HOME Notebook Plants Fungi What's New? Shot of the Week Hikes Drives ... Book References FUNGI I know, I know... to many people fungi are not nearly as interesting as the flowers, but because of the moisture around these mountains, there's a great abundance of these fascinating things. Plus, think of them this way: They comprise a greater biomass of the forest you walk thru. While these vegetation decomposers are at work underfoot (and mostly are depended upon by rooty plants directly), the visible parts we see of the molds and fungus and mushrooms are, like flowers, just the sexy parts. (There are some excellent fungal websites , too) Since fungi identification is a tricky business, i'm going to break them down only by major category rather than by species. That way i can be sure i'm not making gross errors. See, i'm not very knowledgeable about these things. Gilled Mushrooms - The general group when we think of mushrooms; please do not read this as 'grilled mushrooms.' Also, don't think of them as breathing underwater. It means that underneath their cap are slits that release their spores (seeds).

151. Fungi Of Australia
Home page for site introducing Australian fungi , sponsored by the Friends ofthe Australian National Botanic Gardens. Types of fungi. Two major groups.
http://www.anbg.gov.au/fungi/
Australian National Botanic Gardens
Fungi Web Site
Sponsored by the Friends of the Australian National Botanic Gardens Home

Introduction
What is a fungus? Types of fungi ... Site map Search the Fungi web site:
Written by Heino Lepp, updated on web 12 February, 2004 by webmaster (

152. Persimmon General Information
Persimmon information including description, varieties, planting practices, and a list of fungi and insects affecting the tree.
http://www.extento.hawaii.edu/kbase/crop/crops/i_persim.htm
Crop Knowledge Master Search by: Crop
Persimmon
Other Names: Japanese Persimmon, Kaki
Fruits and Nuts
General Crop Information Insects and Other Pests Plant Disease Pathogens MENU Description Varieties Uses Propagation ... Navigation Bar
GENERAL CROP INFORMATION
This summary was prepared from a publication by
Chia, C. L. et. al.. FAMILY: Ebenaceae
SCIENTIFIC NAME: Diospyros kaki
ORIGIN: Asia DESCRIPTION Back To: Menu Bar
Persimmon is a dioecious, deciduous tree growing to 25 ft (7.6 m) high. It has ovate or obovate leaves, 3 in. to 7 in. (7.6-17.8 cm) long that are shiny on top and pubescent beneath. The leaves are borne on pubescent branchlets. Persimmon flowers are yellowish white and 0.75 in. (1.9 cm) long. Staminate (male) flowers have 16 to 24 stamens, while pistillate (female) flowers have eight staminodes. The fruit is classified as a a juicy berry. It is 3.5 in. (8.9 cm) in diameter and variable in shape, with a pale yellow, orange, or red exterior, and with orange flesh. There is an enlarged persistent calyx at its base. Fruits are usually set in clusters.
VARIETIES Back To: Menu Bar
USES Back To: Menu Bar
The fruit is usually eaten fresh. The fruits can also be dried for storage and later consumption.

153. Fungi
Visit Fun Facts About fungi for very interestingcoverage of the fungi we study.
http://www2.una.edu/pdavis/fungi.htm
Home Algae Bryophytes Fungi BI 362 Non-vascular Plants Click on either group below Protistan Fungi Kingdom Fungi Visit Fun Facts About Fungi for very interesting coverage of the fungi we study.

154. African Dust Brings Germs, Fungi Across The Atlantic
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/TECH/science/07/01/deadly.dust.ap/index.html

155. Botany Online: Interactions - Plants - Fungi - Evolution - Parasitic And Symbiot
Interactions between Plants and fungi the Evolution of their Parasitic and SymbioticRelations. What are fungi? Plant and fungi That Share the Same Biotopes.
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e33/33.htm
Interactions between Plants and Fungi: the Evolution of their Parasitic and Symbiotic Relations
What are Fungi?
Fungi are no plants. They can, just like plants (Plantae) and animals (Animalia), be classified as an original kingdom, that has, like the other two, developed from eucaryotic, single-celled protists (kingdom: Protista). Plants and most fungi share no common homologous structures besides those already conserved at the level of protists. These are: the existence of nuclei, the condensation of DNA with the help of histones, and the presence of actin and tubuline (and thus also of amoeboid movements of cells and of flagellar movements).
These kingdoms do nevertheless share analogies ( convergences, parallel developments ) that are often and wrongly cited as proofs for the relationship of plants and fungi. Three similarities are especially often referred to:
  • Both plant and fungal cells are enclosed by a cell wall while animal cells have no such characteristic. This is true, and cell walls exist in prokaryotes (bacteria, blue-green algae), too. The walls of all three mentioned kingdoms have, nevertheless, different molecular compositions (they contain different molecular classes), their biosynthetic pathways and the way of their cellular growths are different. They are therefore not homologous.
  • 156. Canadian Mycological Resource
    A Canadian focus on mushrooms, fungi, and mycology resources.
    http://www.fungi.ca/
    site sponsor...
    Mycologue Publications
    home mycological
    associations
    ...
    on mushrooms

    Fungi.ca
    Fungi.ca
    is a site providing Canadian content on mycological issues. Useful links, and other relevant material will be provided to help both amateurs and professionals track down what they need on the web. The ultimate usefullness of this site will depend on input from all of you. Suggest links, provide news, articles, and pictures. Make the site what you need it to be. Contact us at info@fungi.ca Who is fungi.ca? Right now a couple of volunteers. Mycologue Publications (a Canadian Mycology Publisher who carry Bryce Kendrick's The Fifth Kingdom ) has kindly donated the web space. Bryce Kendrick has offered to help provide some content. In time maybe you will have some ideas to contribute. April 2003

    157. Fungi
    fungi. fungi, Lichens, Molds, Mushrooms, Rusts, Smuts, Yeasts David Porter John Pickering University of Georgia, Athens. Kingdom, fungi, fungi. Index.
    http://www.discoverlife.org/nh/tx/Fungi/
    Fungi David Porter
    John Pickering

    University of Georgia, Athens
    Fungi Diversity
    Collection Box Discover Life All Living Things Fungi Photographs

    158. Basidiomycetes
    A clearing house for research information about the basidiomycete fungi. Includes a list of laboratories focused on the basidiomycota, lists of basidiomycete species, conferences and other events, and an index of available genomic information.
    http://www.basidiomycetes.org/
    Coming Soon! Call for Papers
    Genetics and Cell Biology of Basidiomycetes VI

    Pamplona, Spain
    gcbb-vi@unavarra.es

    The phylum basidiomycota consists of fungi that produce spores that are formed outside a pedestal-like structure, the basidium. The members of this phylum, known as basidiomycetes, include all the fungi with gills or pores, including the familiar mushrooms and bracket fungi. In addition to the commercial and culinary importance of edible basidiomycetes such as Agaricus bisporus, the common "pizza" mushroom, and Lentinula edodes , the Shiitake mushroom, basidiomycetes are important as plant and human pathogens. Cryptococcus neoformans is a human pathogen of considerable importance, especially in individuals with AIDS or other conditions that reduce the effectiveness of the immune response. Ustilago maydis or corn smut is a significant agricultural pathogen. The genomes of two model organisms in the group, Coprinus cinereus and Phanerochaete chrysosporium have been sequenced and are in the process of annotation. See the genome link below for the status of these and other basidiomycete genome projects, and links to sites with data.

    159. Welcome
    NZfungi New Zealand fungi. Whether your interest is pathology, systematics,ecology, conservation, or simply browsing, these web
    http://nzfungi.landcareresearch.co.nz/html/mycology.asp?ID=05-OJO-11

    160. Homepage Of The North West Fungus Group
    Homepage of fungus recording group based in the Northwest of England and Wales. The site includes lots of information about fungi, mushrooms and mycology.
    http://fungus.org.uk/nwfg.htm
    Index
    About Fungi Beginner's Section Edible Fungi Fungus Facts ... Residential Weekend, Blencathra, Cumbria
    North West Fungus Group
    The North West Fungus Group (NWFG) was established in 1994 as a regional umbrella group to promote an interest in fungi in the Northwest of England and Wales, UK. We cover the counties of Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, Lancashire and Merseyside in England, and the vice-counties of Denbighshire and Flintshire (now part of Clwyd) in Wales. The main aims of the group are as follows:
    • To identify and record the fungi in the Northwest region. To promote an interest in fungi through forays, talks and workshops open to members of the Group and others with an interest in joining the Group. To promote an interest in fungi through talks given to natural history societies and the general public. To promote the conservation of fungi and of threatened habitats of rare fungi. To liaise with other relevant groups and active individuals in the Northwest.

    We are affiliated to the British Mycological Society and produce two newsletters a year.

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