From neroinferno from gmail.com Thu Nov 1 04:04:13 2007 From: neroinferno from gmail.com (neroinferno@gmail.com) Date: Thu Nov 1 08:27:51 2007 Subject: [Mycology] Luminescent mushrooms? Message-ID: <1193907853.011499.306350@v3g2000hsg.googlegroups.com> Hello, i run a no profit organization called Free Spore Prints. We spread for free sporeprints and cultures of edibles and medicinals overworld. For every sporeprint we send we ask, for at least a sporeprint, generated from the sporeprint we sent. We are looking for Luminescent Mushrooms cultures. Anyone can help us? Thank you all, Fabio From aloe from netrover.com Sun Nov 11 13:20:14 2007 From: aloe from netrover.com (J & J) Date: Sun Nov 11 23:27:54 2007 Subject: [Mycology] 2 Q's: Snowbanks globally and Amanita mycorrhizals Message-ID: <473747DE.D22A223F@netrover.com> Hi there, Is it true that snowbank fungi have only been found in western north america, or is it just very rare for them to be found in other parts of the world? Or, is this data possibly due to this being a topic not heavily investigated in other parts of the world? Is it rare or not-unusual for Amanitas to form non-ecto-mycorrhizal relationships? I had assumed their mycorrhizal relationships were always EM, but found a reference to Amanita aureofloccosa stating that it is "non-ecto-mycorrhizal" (ref. did not elaborate further). With thanks in advance for any response. Yours in curiousity, Juliet Pendray From FloridaMycology from cs.com Wed Nov 14 11:08:51 2007 From: FloridaMycology from cs.com (FloridaMycology@cs.com) Date: Wed Nov 14 13:32:26 2007 Subject: [Mycology] $2.00 Mushroom Spore Sale Message-ID: <1195055911.714868.190980@q5g2000prf.googlegroups.com> To help everyone who wants to further their study in mushrooms, and money may be tight, FMRC is running a $2.00 mushroom spore sample Sale! Just go to www.mushroomsfmrc.com and learn more. Now you have no excuse for expanding your mushroom knowledge. Thank you all for the past 36 years of support. slp/fmrc From Abhijit.ibb from gmail.com Fri Nov 16 20:47:40 2007 From: Abhijit.ibb from gmail.com (Abhijit.ibb@gmail.com) Date: Fri Nov 16 22:17:30 2007 Subject: [Mycology] Mycobacterium genomics Message-ID: <542889f0-2dff-4729-8459-23b105f08c4a@s6g2000prc.googlegroups.com> Is there any tool available for gene by gene comparison of genomes of two mycobacterium strains? From Abhijit.ibb from gmail.com Fri Nov 16 20:48:06 2007 From: Abhijit.ibb from gmail.com (Abhijit.ibb@gmail.com) Date: Fri Nov 16 22:17:34 2007 Subject: [Mycology] Mycobacterium genomics Message-ID: <3ecd7a34-0952-4e73-94aa-06588ee9a2b2@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com> Where can we get 2D gel plots of supernatent of alveolar macrophage cell culture? From shishupala from rediffmail.com Sat Nov 17 04:15:52 2007 From: shishupala from rediffmail.com (Shishupala ) Date: Sat Nov 17 13:17:33 2007 Subject: [Mycology] Mycological Society of India Message-ID: <20071117091552.21497.qmail@f5mail35.rediffmail.com> ? ? ?Dear Dr. Amano, Please find herein address of Secretary of Mycological Society of India. Dr. J. Muthumary Professor, C.A.S. In Botany University of Madras Guindy Campus, Chennai - 25, India e-mail. mm_j@rediffmail.com Now website of Mycological Society of India is also made. Kavaka upto 2006 has been released. Prof. Natarajan in the editory who may be contacted in the same above address. Hope you will get things from MSI. If you need any other information, I may try to provide them. with best wishes, Shishupala Dr. S. Shishupala Chairman Department of Microbiology, KUVEMPU UNIVERSITY Post-graduate Centre, Shivagangotri Campus Davangere -577002 Karnataka, India Ph. No. Res: 08192-221110 off: 08192-208081 Fax: 08192-208420 From fdepuydt from gmail.com Sun Nov 18 15:18:58 2007 From: fdepuydt from gmail.com (Frederick Depuydt) Date: Sun Nov 18 16:29:09 2007 Subject: [Mycology] introduction + mycorrhiza request Message-ID: <4b8d554e0711181218n63782bb0u4834e4b820fa90e9@mail.gmail.com> Hello all, my name is Frederick and my background in mycology is slim to none. My main devotion is culture of terrestrial orchids, I'm a micro-electronics engineer as profession, and a couple fo years ago I started an internet domain on the subject (terrorchid.org). The amount of terrestrial orchids that are waiting to be brought into culture is tremendous, but multiplication is one of the difficulties in making them accessible among growers and hybridisers. Asymbiotic IV recipees exist for a number of genera/species, but not for most of them. Seeds become available only sporadically, so there's a limited amount of experimenting one can do. One thing we have noticed, however, is that symbiotic IV with mycorrhiza has a higher germination success rate. This does not get rid of all the problems, but there's more confidence in using fungal cultures than a selfmade cocktail. Most of these seeds come from species of which virtually nothing is known except a photo or single publication. Mycorrhiza behave as 'black boxes' that get the job done in most occasions. Unfortunately, it's difficult to find identified or documented mycorrhiza in controlled culture. This is why I'm posting this message. We're looking for fungus banks that contain orchid mycorrhiza, either isolated from known orchids or locations, or known to help in orchid germination. Any help in pointing out such resources would be very much appreciated. In addition we've started to build a reference for orchid mycorrhiza: http://wiki.terrorchid.org/mycorrhiza:genera It's a limited reference for the moment, but it has potential. kind regards and thanks for your time, Frederick Depuydt From geis.pa from pg.com Mon Nov 19 08:05:19 2007 From: geis.pa from pg.com (Geis, Phil) Date: Mon Nov 19 14:23:19 2007 Subject: [Mycology] RE: Mycology Digest, Vol 29, Issue 4 In-Reply-To: <200711171704.lAHH4GY09160@net.bio.net> References: <200711171704.lAHH4GY09160@net.bio.net> Message-ID: <3B4A11B0E75E524AB9EFDF2BDC5CE4F88AB1E2@bdc-emb005.na.pg.com> You could sequence the entire genomes of each isolate - not an inexpensive operation. What is the objective -= perhaps there's another way to answer your question. -----Original Message----- From: mycology-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu [mailto:mycology-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu] On Behalf Of mycology-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2007 12:04 PM To: mycology@magpie.bio.indiana.edu Subject: Mycology Digest, Vol 29, Issue 4 Send Mycology mailing list submissions to mycology@net.bio.net To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/mycology or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to mycology-request@net.bio.net You can reach the person managing the list at mycology-owner@net.bio.net When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Mycology digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Mycobacterium genomics (Abhijit.ibb@gmail.com) 2. Mycobacterium genomics (Abhijit.ibb@gmail.com) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 17:47:40 -0800 (PST) From: Abhijit.ibb@gmail.com Subject: [Mycology] Mycobacterium genomics To: bionet-mycology@moderators.isc.org Message-ID: <542889f0-2dff-4729-8459-23b105f08c4a@s6g2000prc.googlegroups.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Is there any tool available for gene by gene comparison of genomes of two mycobacterium strains? ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2007 17:48:06 -0800 (PST) From: Abhijit.ibb@gmail.com Subject: [Mycology] Mycobacterium genomics To: bionet-mycology@moderators.isc.org Message-ID: <3ecd7a34-0952-4e73-94aa-06588ee9a2b2@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Where can we get 2D gel plots of supernatent of alveolar macrophage cell culture? ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Mycology mailing list Mycology@net.bio.net http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/mycology End of Mycology Digest, Vol 29, Issue 4 *************************************** From dwheeler from ipns.com Wed Nov 28 05:10:25 2007 From: dwheeler from ipns.com (dwheeler@ipns.com) Date: Wed Nov 28 14:28:36 2007 Subject: [Mycology] Re: introduction + mycorrhiza request References: Message-ID: <877af19d-9b38-4a31-b28f-2a664cfbe567@s8g2000prg.googlegroups.com> On Nov 18, 12:18 pm, "Frederick Depuydt" wrote: > Hello all, > > my name is Frederick and my background in mycology is slim to none. My > main devotion is culture of terrestrial orchids, I'm a > micro-electronics engineer as profession, and a couple fo years ago I > started an internet domain on the subject (terrorchid.org). > > The amount of terrestrial orchids that are waiting to be brought into > culture is tremendous, but multiplication is one of the difficulties > in making them accessible among growers and hybridisers. Asymbiotic IV > recipees exist for a number of genera/species, but not for most of > them. Seeds become available only sporadically, so there's a limited > amount of experimenting one can do. > > One thing we have noticed, however, is that symbiotic IV with > mycorrhiza has a higher germination success rate. This does not get > rid of all the problems, but there's more confidence in using fungal > cultures than a selfmade cocktail. Most of these seeds come from > species of which virtually nothing is known except a photo or single > publication. Mycorrhiza behave as 'black boxes' that get the job done > in most occasions. > > Unfortunately, it's difficult to find identified or documented > mycorrhiza in controlled culture. This is why I'm posting this > message. We're looking for fungus banks that contain orchid > mycorrhiza, either isolated from known orchids or locations, or known > to help in orchid germination. Any help in pointing out such resources > would be very much appreciated. > > In addition we've started to build a reference for orchid mycorrhiza:http://wiki.terrorchid.org/mycorrhiza:genera > It's a limited reference for the moment, but it has potential. > > kind regards and thanks for your time, > Frederick Depuydt While a student at Oregon State University, I was informed that Helen Gilkey had cultivated several species of Choleorhiza (sp?) orchids by first growing Rhizopogon vinicolor (a very common hypogeous fungi which the orchids live off of) first in association with Douglas-fir seedlings. She was the only preson I know of who has been successful at such cultivation. It is illegal in California and Oregon to possess even a single flower of these orchids. The fine, as I recall, used to be $500 per flower, and a single stem of these orchids may have 40-200 flowers/buds/seed pods on it. So possession of a stem if you are caught could net you a rather hefty fine. OTOH, very few people know these are orchids anyway... Rhizopogon vinicolor is relatively easy to introduce to Douglas-fir. A simple slurry of sporocarps sprayed 2-4 times on seedling trees will ensure nearly 95% colonization of the rootlets if done during the spring. Each slurry application should be done after 2-3 weeks intervals, and preferably during a rain so spores can be washed into the soil near the seedling tree rootlets. Spores not in close proximity to rootlets do not appear to germinate. Since R. vinicolor is mostly spores, a single average sporocarp of 1 inch diameter will inoculate around a million seedling trees, or enough to reforest several square miles at 700 trees per acre. Daniel B. Wheeler From nass_adr from yahoo.fr Thu Nov 29 03:07:22 2007 From: nass_adr from yahoo.fr (hakim abas) Date: Thu Nov 29 13:22:28 2007 Subject: [Mycology] (no subject) Message-ID: <548591.93903.qm@web28113.mail.ukl.yahoo.com> Dear professor, > > Good morning! My name is ADRAR Nassim Salem. I am > a student in second year of majister of Molecular > Biology in ABDERAHMANE MIRA University ( Algeria ). > > I am preparing my thesis about:" > selection of halophilic actinomycetes which provide > antimicrobial substances". This selection is based > on antagonistic activity (agar blocks, ). > > I should greatly appreciate if you could send me > articles or courses about actinomycetes. > > As an attached file to my E-mail box: > nass_adr@yahoo.fr > > At the end, I would like to send you my warm > greetings and thank you very much for your help > beforehand. > > > Yours sincerely Adrar Nassim Salem > --------------------------------- Ne gardez plus qu'une seule adresse mail ! Copiez vos mails vers Yahoo! Mail