[PDF] Macrofungi Myxomycetes Vegetation And Soils Associated With Five Terrestrial Natural Communities At Ha Ha Tonka State Park Missouri - eBooks Review

Macrofungi Myxomycetes Vegetation And Soils Associated With Five Terrestrial Natural Communities At Ha Ha Tonka State Park Missouri


Macrofungi Myxomycetes Vegetation And Soils Associated With Five Terrestrial Natural Communities At Ha Ha Tonka State Park Missouri
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Macrofungi Myxomycetes Vegetation And Soils Associated With Five Terrestrial Natural Communities At Ha Ha Tonka State Park Missouri


Macrofungi Myxomycetes Vegetation And Soils Associated With Five Terrestrial Natural Communities At Ha Ha Tonka State Park Missouri
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Author : Christopher D. Crabtree
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2008

Macrofungi Myxomycetes Vegetation And Soils Associated With Five Terrestrial Natural Communities At Ha Ha Tonka State Park Missouri written by Christopher D. Crabtree and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2008 with Biotic communities categories.


This project investigated macrofungal and myxomycete species richness and associations to vascular flora and soils of five natural communities at Ha Ha Tonka State Park in Missouri. Communities included glades, open woodlands, forests, flatwoods, and karst sinks. Data on herbaceous and overstory vegetation, soils, precipitation amounts, and temperature and relative humidity measurements were collected to define specific biotic and abiotic components necessary for macrofungi and myxomycete development. Permanent 0.01 ha plots were established and surveyed during the growing seasons of 2006 and 2007 and resulted in approximately 234 fungal taxa, 34 myxomycetes and 289 floral taxa. Non-metric multidimensional scaling and multi-response permutation statistical measures were used to evaluate the null hypothesis of no association of fungal species to communities and soils. Results indicate that forest communities are most diverse in ectomycorrhizal fungi, and higher soil pH and phosphorus levels in karst sinks and glades resulted in fewer mycorrhizal fungi.