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Home » fungi
Tag: fungi

New Book from Matheny

August 23, 2017 by armsworth

EEB’s Brandon Matheny, together with Neale Bougher from the Western Australian Herbarium, authored a book that came out in June 2017 called Fungi of Australia: Inocybaceae.  This major revision describes a total of 137 recognized species, of which 101 are new to science!  Read the full description from the publisher, below.

From Csiro Publishing

The family Inocybaceae are a diverse cosmopolitan group of gilled fungi. Until now, only a small number of species had been described from Australia, but with this major revision a total of 137 species are recognised, of which 101 are new to science. Ninety per cent of these species (121 of the 137) are found only in Australia. Phylogenetic work shows that the family can be divided into seven main groups, of which six are now recorded from Australia, making this country one of the major centres of diversity for the family. They are all thought to be ectomycorrhizal, that is they form mutually beneficial associations with the roots of plants, and are found on soil and amid litter in wet- and dry-sclerophyll shrublands, woodlands and forests, and cool- or warm temperate rainforests. Many are small and easily overlooked, but their diversity of colour and delicate structure make them attractive to those with an eye for detail.­ This authoritative account provides a major advance in knowledge for this diverse and widespread group, with detailed descriptions, identification keys and phylogenetic trees based on DNA sequences generated during the work. Every species is illustrated with coloured plates and/or line drawings of microscopic features.

Fungi of Australia: Inocybaceae is a useful reference for professional and semi-professional mycologists in Australia and around the world.

Filed Under: book, fungi, MAIN, Matheny Tagged With: Australia, fungi, Inocybaceae, Matheny

Hughes, Matheny, and Petersen in News-Sentinel

April 5, 2017 by armsworth

The Knoxville News-Sentinel has an article on the research that Karen Hughes, Brandon Matheny and Ron Petersen are doing on the post-fire growth of fungi in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.  Check it out at

http://www.knoxnews.com/story/news/local/tennessee/gatlinburg/2017/04/04/more-than-75-want-do-post-fire-research-great-smoky-mountains-national-park/99972750/

Filed Under: fungi, Great Smoky Mountains NP, Hughes, MAIN, Matheny, News Sentinel, newspaper, Petersen Tagged With: fire, fungi, GSMNP, Hughes, Matheny, News-Sentinel, Petersen, Smokies

Cover Images for Matheny Lab

February 13, 2017 by armsworth

Marisol Sanchez-Garcia (PhD 2016), former Matheny Lab member and now a postdoc at Clark University, landed a paper on ectomycorrhizal diversification on the cover of Evolution for January 2017.

 

Also, Biz Sheedy, a visiting grad student to the Matheny Lab from Melbourne, has a paper on the diversification of truffle-forming fungi in Australia on the cover of Australian Systematic Botany (Volume 29 numbers 4-5).

 

Filed Under: alumni, fungi, MAIN, Matheny, publication Tagged With: cover image, fungi, Matheny, Sanchez-Garcia, Sheedy

Matheny Receives Stuntz Foundation Award

December 14, 2016 by armsworth

Associate Professor Brandon Matheny received an award from the Daniel E. Stuntz Memorial Foundation to revise the taxonomy of species of Inocybe (a genus of mushroom-forming fungi in the order Agaricales) published by Dan Stuntz between 1947 and 1984. A revision of these species will facilitate a new floristic and monographic treatment of Inocybe in North America, a cosmopolitan genus represented by some 350 species in North America alone.

Filed Under: award, MAIN, Matheny Tagged With: award, fungi, Matheny, Stuntz

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