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- Publications
- Influence
Ectomycorrhizal communities of Quercus garryana are similar on serpentine and nonserpentine soils
- A. Moser, J. Frank, Jad A. D’Allura, D. Southworth
- Biology
- Plant and Soil
- 1 February 2009
Serpentine soils, rich in iron, magnesium, and heavy metals, select for unique plant communities and for endemic species. Because mycorrhizal fungi mediate the interaction between plants and soil, we… Expand
Mycorrhizas on nursery and field seedlings of Quercus garryana
- D. Southworth, E. M. Carrington, J. Frank, P. Gould, C. Harrington, Warren D. Devine
- Biology, Medicine
- Mycorrhiza
- 13 January 2009
Oak woodland regeneration and restoration requires that seedlings develop mycorrhizas, yet the need for this mutualistic association is often overlooked. In this study, we asked whether Quercus… Expand
Fungal Planet description sheets: 868–950
- P. Crous, A. Carnegie, +343 authors K. Larsson
- Biology, Medicine
- Persoonia
- 1 June 2019
Novel species of fungi described in this study include those from various countries as follows: Australia, Chaetomella pseudocircinoseta and Coniella pseudodiospyri on Eucalyptus microcorys leaves,… Expand
NATS truffle and truffle-like fungi 13: Tuber quercicola and T. whetstonense, new species from Oregon, and T. candidum redescribed
- J. Frank, D. Southworth, J. Trappe
- Biology
- 2006
- 16
- 2
Boletus rubriceps , a new species of porcini from the southwestern USA
The porcini ( Boletus s.s.) are an economically important group of ectomycorrhizal fungi whose basidiocarps have a white tube layer at first, reticulate stipe, and white flesh. The type species, B.… Expand
Mechanical mastication and prescribed fire in conifer–hardwood chaparral: differing responses of ectomycorrhizae and truffles
- D. Southworth, J. Donohue, J. Frank, B. JenniferGibson
- Geography
- 15 November 2011
Fire-prone hardwood-conifer chaparral comprises a significant component of vegetation in seasonally dry areas where prescribed burns of standing vegetation are limited by air-quality restrictions and… Expand
Balsamia (Sequestrate Helvellaceae, Ascomycota) in western North America
- D. Southworth, J. Frank, M. Castellano, M. Smith, J. Trappe
- Biology, Medicine
- Fungal systematics and evolution
- 6 June 2018
Balsamia, a hypogeous, sequestrate genus in the Helvellaceae, has been characterized variously as having three to eight species in North America, and these have been considered either different from… Expand
Alessioporus rubriflavus (Boletaceae), a new species from the eastern United States
- J. Frank, A. R. Bessette, A. Bessette
- Biology
- 28 February 2017
In 2014 Alessioporus was erected as a monotypic genus. Here we describe a new species from the eastern United States, Alessioporus rubriflavus, based on unique morphology and molecular data (ITS and… Expand
Rodent dispersal of fungal spores promotes seedling establishment away from mycorrhizal networks on Quercus garryana
- J. Frank, S. Anglin, E. M. Carrington, D. Taylor, B. Viratos, D. Southworth
- Biology
- 5 September 2009
With global warming and the possible decline of conifers, more habitat may be available to oaks, particularly at higher elevations and more northerly latitudes. Whether oaks expand into new habitats… Expand
Aquatic gilled mushrooms: Psathyrella fruiting in the Rogue River in southern Oregon
- J. Frank, Robert A Coffan, D. Southworth
- Biology, Medicine
- Mycologia
- 1 January 2010
A species of Psathyrella (Basidiomycota) with true gills has been observed fruiting underwater in the clear, cold, flowing waters of the upper Rogue River in Oregon. Fruiting bodies develop and… Expand
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