Search results (Index filtered)
Search for "
INOCYBE|dulcamara":
8 articles found in Index.
PILÁT A. (1955): Vláknice potměchuťová - Inocybe dulcamara (A. et S. ex Fr. Quél. a vláknice zemní - Inocybe terrigena (Fr.) Kühner. Česká Mykologie 9(4): 157-161 (published: 17th November, 1955)
RAMSHAJ Q., RUSEVSKA K., TOFILOVSKA S., KARADELEV M. (2021): Checklist of macrofungi from oak forests in the Republic of Kosovo. [fungi, taxa, Balkan Peninsula, diversity, ecology, rare species.] Czech Mycology 73(1): 21-42 (published: 12th February, 2021) Electronic supplement
abstract
In the period from 2017 to 2019 a survey of the diversity of fungi in oak forests in the Republic of Kosovo was conducted. The survey included 31 localities, mainly in Quercetum frainetto-cerris and Querco-Carpinetum orientalis communities. As a result of the fieldwork performed in various seasons, a first checklist of fungi from oak forests in the country is provided. A total of 220 taxa (219 species and one forma) were identified. The majority of the identified taxa belong to Basidiomycota (206) and only 14 species to Ascomycota. The paper provides a list of all recorded species with data on locality, altitude, time of collection, forest association and type of substrate. Distribution and ecology of selected rare or threatened species are briefly discussed.
ZOTTI M., PAUTASSO M. (2013): Macrofungi in Mediterranean Quercus ilex woodlands: relations to vegetation structure, ecological gradients and higher-taxon approach. [conservation biology, ectomycorrhiza (ECM), fungal diversity, multivariate analysis] Czech Mycology 65(2): 193-218 (published: 20th December, 2013)
abstract
Few studies have investigated the relationships between mycodiversity and plant communities in Quercus ilex (holm oak) woodlands. These are unique ecosystems in the Mediterranean basin of high mycological importance. The macrofungi of Q. ilex forests in Liguria, North-Western Italy, were studied: 246 species were observed in 15 permanent plots over four years. Some species were identified as typical of holm oak woodlands, e.g. Hygrophorus russula, Leccinellum lepidum, and Lactarius atlanticus.Correspondence analysis (CA) showed that the main ecological gradients shaping the fungal and plant communities are driven by soil pH and climatic factors. The CA confirms that the minimum sampling area for macrofungi is larger than for plant communities and that aggregation of multiple plots is suitable for data analysis. The data suggest that the higher-taxon approach can be successfully applied also to Q. ilex macrofungi, not only for total species and genus richness, but also within abundance classes. Further investigations are required to better characterise the mycodiversity of Mediterranean holm oak woodlands in relation to human impacts over various scales to plan effective conservation strategies.
SALERNI E., LAGANÀ A., PERINI C., DE DOMINICIS V. (2000): Effects of various forestry operations on the fungal flora of fir woods - first results. [Species diversity, macromycetes, forestry operations, fir woods] Czech Mycology 52(3): 209-218 (published: 7th December, 2000)
abstract
The first results of the effects of some parameters on the composition of the fungal flora in Abies alba Miller woods are reported. Medium thinning and removal litter seems to have contributed to a slight increase in species diversity. Moreover, the results suggest that this type of study should be continued and extended to other areas, to obtain a large amount of data.
STANGL J., VESELSKÝ J. (1980): Analytische Bestimmungstabelle der europäischen höckerig-eckigsporigen Risspilze. (Beiträge zur Kenntnis seltenerer Inocyben. Nr.17.). Česká Mykologie 34(1): 45-53 (published: 1980)
abstract
Reliable identification of the warted-angular-spored species of the genus Inocybe belongs to the most difficult tasks of applied inocybology. The presented analytical identification key, comprising 56 European species, provides the first systematic overview of the diversity of individual members of the subgenus Inocybe [subgen. Clypeus (Britz. ex Britz.) J.E. Lange].
BLATTNÝ C., KRÁLÍK O., VESELSKÝ J., KASALA B., HERZOVÁ H. (1973): Particles resembling virions accompanying the proliferation of Agaric mushrooms. Česká Mykologie 27(1): 1-5 (published: 25th February, 1973)
abstract
Rod-shaped particles, 22–28 × 119 nm in size, and isometric particles, 30 nm in diameter, were electron microscopically detected in fruit bodies of Armillariella mellea, Laccaria laccata, and Inocybe dulcamara bearing hymeniform proliferations. The particles resemble virions. If they are indeed virions, it is not yet clear whether one or two viruses are involved. In the case of virosis, a name for a complex of viruses causing the proliferation of agaric mushrooms might be used. The disease was transmitted to Laccaria amethystina and Pholiota mutabilis by watering with a suspension of homogenized fruit bodies of Armillariella mellea. The proliferation is therefore presumed to be a virus disease.
KUBIČKA J. (1971): Inocybe geraniodora Favre, eine neue Art für die Tschechoslowakei. Česká Mykologie 25(4): 239-241 (published: 1971)
abstract
Inocybe geraniodora Favre was found in the Belanská Tatras (Czechoslovakia) at about 1950 m altitude on limestone soils in Caricetum firmae carpaticum communities. The species is new for the Czechoslovak mycoflora.
ŠMARDA F. (1965): Mykozönologischer Vergleich der Kiefernforsten auf Flugsanden des beckens Dolnomoravský úval in Südmähren mit denen der Tiefebene Záhorská nížina in der westlichen Slowakei. Česká Mykologie 19(1): 11-20 (published: 1965)
abstract
The article compares pine forests on aeolian sands in Rohatec (South Moravia) and Šajdíkové Humence (West Slovakia), focusing on soil properties, vegetation, and macrofungi. Forests in Doubrava near Hodonín were once dominated by oak, later replaced by Scots pine. In contrast, pine is native to the Záhorská nížina region. Historical vegetation development and ecological characteristics are discussed.
Back to "
INOCYBE|dulcamara" (Index view)
-----------------
job done in 0.0427 sec.