78 research outputs found

    Some records of wood-inhabiting fungi on Fagus sylvatica in northern Spain

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    Es presenta una llista d'algunes recol·leccions interessants de macromicets sobre Fagus, fetes en algunes prospeccions a Astúries i Navarra, en novembre de 2005 . Pel cap baix, Antrodiella fissiliformis, Nemania carbonacea y Phellinus cavicola representen les primeres citacions per a l 'estat espanyol. Des del punt de vista de l' interès per a la conservació de la biodiversitat fúngica, les reserves integrals de Lizardoia i Aztaparreta, a Navarra, es consideren d'especial importància per a la conservació dels fongs saproxílics fagícoles del sud-oest d'Europa. Aquest treball vol estimular també l 'estudi continuat dels fongs lignícoles a les fagedes de l 'estat espanyol.Se presenta una lista de algunos allaazgos interesantes de macromicetes lignícolas sobre Fagus, realizados durante las prospecciones en Asturias y Navarra, en noviembre de 2005. Por lo menos Antrodiella fissiliformis, Nemania carbonacea y Phellinus cavicola representan primeras citas para España. desde una prespectiva de la conservación de la biodiversidad fúngica, las reservas integrales de L izardoia i Aztaparreta, en Navarra, se consideran de especial importancia para la conservación de los hongos saproxílicos fagícolas en el sudoeste de Europa. Este trabajo esta orientado también a fomentar el estudio continuado de los hongos lignícolas en los hayedos de España.A list is given of some interesting records of lignicolous macrofungi found on Fagus during some excursions in Asturias and Navarra in November 2005 . At least Antrodiella fissiliformis, Nemania carbonacea and Phellinus cavicola represent frrst records for the country. In a conservation perspective, the strict forest reserves Lizardoia and Aztaparreta in Navarra are considered to be important for the conservation of saproxylic fungi on beech in south western Europe. It is our hope that the paper will inspire to continued studies of wood-inhabiting fungi in beech forests in Spain

    Some records of wood-inhabiting fungi on Fagus sylvatica in northern Spain

    Get PDF
    Es presenta una llista d'algunes recol·leccions interessants de macromicets sobre Fagus, fetes en algunes prospeccions a Astúries i Navarra, en novembre de 2005 . Pel cap baix, Antrodiella fissiliformis, Nemania carbonacea y Phellinus cavicola representen les primeres citacions per a l 'estat espanyol. Des del punt de vista de l' interès per a la conservació de la biodiversitat fúngica, les reserves integrals de Lizardoia i Aztaparreta, a Navarra, es consideren d'especial importància per a la conservació dels fongs saproxílics fagícoles del sud-oest d'Europa. Aquest treball vol estimular també l 'estudi continuat dels fongs lignícoles a les fagedes de l 'estat espanyol.A list is given of some interesting records of lignicolous macrofungi found on Fagus during some excursions in Asturias and Navarra in November 2005 . At least Antrodiella fissiliformis, Nemania carbonacea and Phellinus cavicola represent frrst records for the country. In a conservation perspective, the strict forest reserves Lizardoia and Aztaparreta in Navarra are considered to be important for the conservation of saproxylic fungi on beech in south western Europe. It is our hope that the paper will inspire to continued studies of wood-inhabiting fungi in beech forests in Spain.Se presenta una lista de algunos allaazgos interesantes de macromicetes lignícolas sobre Fagus, realizados durante las prospecciones en Asturias y Navarra, en noviembre de 2005. Por lo menos Antrodiella fissiliformis, Nemania carbonacea y Phellinus cavicola representan primeras citas para España. desde una prespectiva de la conservación de la biodiversidad fúngica, las reservas integrales de L izardoia i Aztaparreta, en Navarra, se consideran de especial importancia para la conservación de los hongos saproxílicos fagícolas en el sudoeste de Europa. Este trabajo esta orientado también a fomentar el estudio continuado de los hongos lignícolas en los hayedos de España

    Reappearance of old growth elements in lowland woodlands in northern Belgium : do the associated species follow?

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    The forest cover of the western European lowland plain has been very low for centuries. Remaining forests were intensively managed, and old-growth elements like veteran trees and coarse woody debris became virtually absent. Only over the last decades have these old-growth elements progressively redeveloped in parks, lanes and forests, and have now reached their highest level over the last 500-1000 years. Biodiversity associated with these old-growth elements makes up an important part of overall forest biodiversity. The ability of species to recolonise the newly available habitat is strongly determined by limitations in their dispersal and establishment. We analyse the current status and development of old-growth elements in Flanders (northern Belgium) and the process of recolonisation by means of specific cases, focussing on saproxylic fungi and saproxylic beetles. Our results show that 'hotspots' of secondary old growth, even isolated small patches, may have more potential for specialised biodiversity than expected, and may provide important new strongholds for recovery and recolonisation of an important share of old-growth related species

    The effects of habitat degradation on metacommunity structure of wood-inhabiting fungi in European beech forests

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    Intensive forest management creates habitat degradation by reducing the variation of forest stands in general, and by removing old trees and dead wood in particular. Non-intervention forest reserves are commonly believed to be the most efficient tool to counteract the negative effects on biodiversity, but actual knowledge of the conservation efficiency is limited, especially for recent reserves. The structure of ecological communities is often described with measures of nestedness, beta diversity and similarity between communities. We studied whether these measures differ among forest reserves with different management histories. For this purpose, we used a large data set of wood-inhabiting fungi collected from dead beech trees in European beech-dominated forest reserves. The structure of fungal assemblages showed high beta diversity, while nestedness and similarity was low. During the decomposition process of trees beta diversity between the communities occupying different trees increased in natural, but not in previously managed sites. Effects of management and decay process on nestedness were complex. We argue that the detected differences most likely reflect historical effects which have extirpated specialized species from the local species pools in managed sites, and resulted in more homogeneous communities in managed sites. It is alarming that community structure is affected the most in the latest decay stages where the decay process turns the dead wood into litter, and which is thus the interface between the wood decay and the litter-decaying ecosystem. The effects of simplified communities in late decay stages on soil biodiversity should be studied

    The Numbers Behind Mushroom Biodiversity

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    Fungi are among the most diverse groups of organisms on Earth. with a global diversity estimated at 0.8 million to 5.1 million species. They play fundamental ecological roles as decomposers, mutualists, and pathogens, growing in almost all habitats and being important as sources of food and health benefits, income, and to maintain forest health. Global assessment of wild edible fungi indicate the existence of 2327 useful wild species; 2166 edible and 1069 used as food; 470 medicinal species. Several million tonnes are collected, consumed, and sold each year in over 80 countries. The major mushroom-producing countries in 2012 were China, Italy, USA, and The Netherlands, with 80% of the world production, 64% of which came from China. The European Union produces 24% of the world production. Italy is the largest European producer, Poland is the largest exporter, UK the largest importer.Fungi are difficult to preserve and fossilize and due to the poor preservation of most fungal structures, it has been difficult to interpret the fossil record of fungi. Hyphae, the vegetative bodies of fungi, bear few distinctive morphological characteristicss, and organisms as diverse as cyanobacteria, eukaryotic algal groups, and oomycetes can easily be mistaken for them (Taylor & Taylor 1993). Fossils provide minimum ages for divergences and genetic lineages can be much older than even the oldest fossil representative found. According to Berbee and Taylor (2010), molecular clocks (conversion of molecular changes into geological time) calibrated by fossils are the only available tools to estimate timing of evolutionary events in fossil‐poor groups, such as fungi. The arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiotic fungi from the division Glomeromycota, generally accepted as the phylogenetic sister clade to the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota, have left the most ancient fossils in the Rhynie Chert of Aberdeenshire in the north of Scotland (400 million years old). The Glomeromycota and several other fungi have been found associated with the preserved tissues of early vascular plants (Taylor et al. 2004a). Fossil spores from these shallow marine sediments from the Ordovician that closely resemble Glomeromycota spores and finely branched hyphae arbuscules within plant cells were clearly preserved in cells of stems of a 400 Ma primitive land plant, Aglaophyton, from Rhynie chert 455–460 Ma in age (Redecker et al. 2000; Remy et al. 1994) and from roots from the Triassic (250–199 Ma) (Berbee & Taylor 2010; Stubblefield et al. 1987).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Melkzwammen.

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    La Cour pénale internationale, une juridiction pour les victimes ?

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    Le 17 juillet 1998, la Conférence diplomatique de plénipotentiaires adopta à Rome le Statut de la Cour pénale internationale. Quand les délégués se levèrent spontanément pour applaudir la réalisation d’un projet vieux d’un demi-siècle, les représentants des ONG qui participaient à la conférence pouvaient être fiers : sans le travail incessant de la société civile internationale pendant plusieurs années, la CPI aurait certes pu voir le jour, mais sa structure et ses compétences auraient été bien différentes. La juridiction pénale internationale permanente qui venait de naître s’annonçait différente de ses prédécesseurs à plusieurs égards. Elle ne serait pas uniquement l’instrument de la « communauté internationale », trop souvent associée aux pays occidentaux, voire aux anciens colonisateurs, mais un forum où les innombrables victimes de crimes de masse et leurs communautés affectées pourraient trouver justice et réparation. Un des acquis les plus importants était en effet la possibilité pour les victimes de participer à la procédure et d’obtenir réparation. Douze ans plus tard, et six ans après l’ouverture du premier dossier, les victimes semblent avoir conquis leur place dans la procédure internationale, leurs représentants ont une influence réelle sur la procédure, mais leurs communautés attendent toujours la réalisation des espoirs créés par la Cour.On the 17th July of 1998, the Diplomatic Conference of Plenipotentiaries adopted in Rome the Statute of the International Criminal Court. When the delegates rise and applaud the realization of a half-of-a- century old project, the participating ONG representatives could be proud : without the restless work of the civil society during several years, the ICC could also have been created, but its structure and jurisdiction wouldn’t have been the same. The new permanent court promised to be different from its predecessors in many aspects. It wouldn’t only be the instrument of the “international community”, often associated with the western countries, or even with the former colonial powers, but a forum where numerous victims of mass crimes and affected communities could find justice and redress. One of the most important achievements was indeed the possibility for victims to participate in the procedure and obtain reparations. Twelve years later and six years after the start of the first case, it victims seem have conquered their place in the courtroom, their legal representatives have an influence on the proceedings, but their communities are still waiting for the expectations created by the ICC being fulfilled.El 17 de julio de 1998, la Conferencia diplomática de plenipotenciarios aprobó el Estatuto de Roma que creó la Corte Penal Internacional. Al anunciarse el resultado de la votación los delegados se pusieron de pie de manera espontánea para aplaudir la culminación de un viejo proyecto de medio siglo ; los representantes de las ONG participantes en la conferencia podían sentirse orgullosos : sin el trabajo incesante de la sociedad civil internacional a lo largo de muchos años, la CPI igual se habría formado algún día, pero su estructura y competencia habrían sido muy diferentes. La jurisdicción penal internacional que acababa de nacer se anunciaba diferente de sus predecesoras en diferentes aspectos. No sería solamente el instrumento de la “comunidad internacional”, con mucha frecuencia asociada a los países occidentales, es decir los antiguos colonizadores, sino un foro para las innumerables victimas de crímenes de masa y sus comunidades afectadas, que podrían esperar justicia y reparación. Una de sus principales características, en efecto, fue la posibilidad de que las víctimas participaran en el proceso para obtener reparación. Doce años más tarde, y a seis de abierto el primer expediente, las víctimas parecen haber conquistado su lugar en el procedimiento internacional y sus representantes tienen una influencia real en dicho proceso, pero sus comunidades están aún a la espera de la realización de las esperanzas creadas por la Corte
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