Survey of corticioid fungi in North American pinaceous forests reveals hyperdiversity, underpopulated sequence databases, and species that are potentially ectomycorrhizal
Lisa M. Rosenthal(University of California, Davis), Thomas D. Bruns(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Sara Branco(Université Paris-Sud), Kabir Peay(Stanford University), Dylan P. Smith(Stanford University), Karl‐Henrik Larsson(University of Gothenburg), Hui‐ling Liao(Duke University), Sydney I. Glassman(University of California, Riverside), Judy A. Chung(University of California, Berkeley), John W. Taylor(University of California, Berkeley), Rytas Vilgalys(Duke University), Jennifer M. Talbot(Harvard University), Else C. Vellinga(Berkeley College)
Cited by 72
Related Papers
A higher-level phylogenetic classification of the Fungi
|Mycological Research|2007|2.4k
Assembling the fungal tree of life: progress, classification, and evolution of subcellular traits
|American Journal of Botany|2004|820
Microtubules can bear enhanced compressive loads in living cells because of lateral reinforcement
|The Journal of Cell Biology|2006|705
Endemism and functional convergence across the North American soil mycobiome
|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2014|556