Katedra Ekologii Stosowanej, Wydział Biologii i Ochrony Środowiska, Uniwersytet Łódzki w Łodzi, Łódź
Bibliografia
[1] M. Blackwell 2011. The Fungi: 1, 2, 3 ... 5.1 million species?. American Journal of Botany 98 (3): 426-438.
[2] P. Bonfante 2003. Plants, mycorrhizal fungi and endobacteria: a dialog among cells and genomes. The Biological Bulletin 204 (2): 215-220.
[3] M. C. Brundrett 2002. Coevolution of roots and mycorrhizas of land plants. New Phytologist 154 (2): 275-304.
[4] B. A. Ferguson et al. 2003. Coarse-scale population structure of pathogenic Armillaria species in a mixed-conifer forest in the Blue Mountains of northeast Oregon. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 33(4): 612-623.
[5] G. M. Gadd 2007. Geomycology: biogeochemical transformations of rocks, minerals, metals and radionuclides by fungi, bioweathering and bioremediation. Mycological Research 111 (Pt 1): 3-49.
[6] D. L. Hawksworth 2006. The fungal dimension of biodiversity: magnitude, significance, and conservation. Mycological Research 95 (6): 641-655.
[7] P. M. Kirk et al. 2008. Dictionary of the Fungi.10th edn. Wallingford, UK: CAB International.
[8] B. L. O'Brien et al 2005. Fungal community analysis by large-scale sequencing of environmental samples. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 71: 5544-5550.
[9] M. L. Smith, J. N. Bruhn, J. B. Anderson 1992.The fungus Armillaria bulbosa is among the largest and oldest living organisms. Nature 356: 428-431.
[10] S. W. Simard et al. 2012. Mycorrhizal networks: Mechanisms, ecology and modelling. Fungal Biology Reviews 26 (1): 39-60.
[11] M. G. A. van der Heijden, T. R. Horton 2009. Socialism in soil? The importance of mycorrhizal fungal networks for facilitation in natural ecosystems. Journal of Ecology 97 (6): 1139-1150.