Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Fungal Conservation
Note from the Editor
This issue of Fungal Conservation is being put together in the glow of achievement associated with the
Third International Congress on Fungal Conservation, held in Muğla, Turkey in November 2013.
The meeting brought together people committed to fungal conservation from all corners of the Earth,
providing information, stimulation, encouragement and general happiness that our work is starting to
bear fruit. Especial thanks to our hosts at the University of Muğla who did so much behind the scenes
to make the conference a success. This issue of Fungal Conservation includes an account of the
meeting, and several papers based on presentations therein.
A major development in the world of fungal conservation happened late last year with the launch of a
new website (http://iucn.ekoo.se/en/iucn/welcome) for the Global Fungal Red Data List Initiative.
This is supported by the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, which also made a most
generous donation to support participants from less-developed nations at our conference. The website
provides a user-friendly interface to carry out IUCN-compliant conservation assessments, and should
be a tool that all of us use. There is more information further on in this issue of Fungal Conservation.
Deadlines are looming for the 10th International Mycological Congress in Thailand in August 2014
(see http://imc10.com/2014/home.html). Conservation issues will be featured in several of the
symposia, with one of particular relevance entitled "Conservation of fungi: essential components of
the global ecosystem”. There will be room for a limited number of contributed papers and posters will
be very welcome also: the deadline for submitting abstracts is 31 March. A satellite meeting focusing
on how to make IUCN conservation assessments will also take place on 3 August, just before the
congress starts. Please put this in your diaries if you are going to Bangkok.
Thank you once again to those dedicated people who have sent articles for publication in Fungal
Conservation. I hope you the reader appreciate their efforts, and are encouraged to contribute to the
next issue!
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
News items
Report from the 3rd International Congress on Fungal
Conservation, Turkey, 11-15 November 2013
Alison Pouliot
Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200,
Australia. Email alison.pouliot@anu.edu.au
Normally at this time of year, activity along the Turkish Turquoise Coast is winding down. The
serene and sunny autumn days seemed to be for the sole pleasure of snoozing dogs on the beach and
the odd fishermen casting a line from the jetty. However, things changed recently when a throng of
mycologists and fungal enthusiasts who were participating in the third International Congress on
Fungal Conservation descended on the small seaside village of Akyaka from every corner of the
globe.
Organised by Dr David Minter (ISFC president) and Professor Dr Mustafa Isiloğlu (and supported by
the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund and Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University), the
Congress attracted representatives from 38 countries who met with the shared aim of promoting
fungal conservation.
David Minter and Mustafa Isiloğlu
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
The Congress melded science, education, infrastructure and politics through an intensive week of
reviews of mycological conservation research; development of infrastructure for fungal conservation;
training workshops on the global fungal RED-listing process; regional reporting on the status of
fungal conservation; discussion of social and political issues relating to fungal conservation, as well as
opportunities to explore Turkish fungi via guided forays in the local forests.
The Congress was received with tremendous hospitality and formality with a procession of local
suited dignitaries participating in the opening ceremony. This was followed by a high-octane
presidential address by David Minter who warmly welcomed participants and gave an overview of
the ISFCs achievements, notably, the six-fold increase in membership since the society's inauguration
in August 2010. Other activities and achievements include the Society's active website and three
issues of the digital publication, Fungal Conservation, as well as a campaign lobbying for greater
inclusion of fungi in school curricula. However, perhaps of greatest importance is the official
recognition of the significance of fungi by the world's first global environmental organisation, the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
The first session of the conference addressed the importance of political
process in fungal conservation and the frameworks and means by which
fungi can gain greater profile and conservation status. The Chair of the
Species Survival Commission of the IUCN, Simon Stuart, opened the
session with an overview of the structure and function of the IUCN and an
explanation of the five specialist fungal groups. This was followed by a
presentation on the importance of political engagement in fungal
conservation by former Australian senator, Lyn Allison. Lyn provided
invaluable advice on political campaigning and understanding how
parliaments operate drawing our attention to the need for greater
contribution to political process by fungal conservationists. Also hailing
from the southern hemisphere, Peter Buchanan provided an overview of
the Global Taxonomy Initiative and the importance of mycologists being
part of such initiatives.
Mycologist, Peter Buchanan
from New Zealand.
The second day of the Congress was dedicated to a review of fungal
conservation progress across the globe presented as regional and country
reports. Most countries share similar challenges to fungal conservation
including the dearth of mycologists, funds, RED-listed species, and
action plans, coupled with public and political disinterest. However, the
Chilean report, presented by Giuliana Furci provided a refreshing and
exciting example of how the motivation and passion of one person
culminated in the formation of Fundación Fungi and the inclusion of
fungi in Chilean environmental legislation. Consequently the Chilean
government is obliged to provide mycological baselines in every
Environmental Impact Assessment as of December 2013.
Australian former politician, Lyn Allison and founder of Fundación Fungi, Giuliana Furci.
Following the plenary session of the ISFC on the third day we headed into the forests of the Kazanci
and Cicekli areas. With temperatures in the mid twenties and no rain in the previous week, the field
sites were fairly dry however dozens of keen eyes spotted several species including various Lactarius
spp., Russula foetens, Coprinus sp., Mycena seynii, Psathyrella candolleana, Agrocybe sp., Lentinus tigrinus,
Tubaria sp., Suillus sp., Coriolopsis polyzona, Ganoderma lucidum, G. resinaceum, Trametes versicolor,
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Scotomyces subviolaceus, Hirschioporus abietinus, Chondrostereum purpuerum, Pisolithus arrhizus and
Scutellinia sp. among others.
The following day Michael Krikorev and Greg Mueller ran an important workshop on the global
fungal RED-listing process via the new website that has been developed by Michael, Greg and Anders
Dahlberg. Three additional workshops entitled, Fungal Conservation: Raising Awareness, Conservation of
Myxomycetes and Conservation of Desert Truffles: an example of how to use information sources for RED-listing
provided participants with not just information but the tools and knowledge for direct action
initiatives.
Another important aspect of fungal conservation is acknowledgement of efforts and excellence. David
Minter announced at the General Assembly that two new award categories had been established. The
first, the Founders’ Award, for lifetime achievement to fungal conservation was awarded to Maria
Lawrynowicz from Poland. Maria is a Founder
Member of the European Council for
Conservation of Fungi and an outstanding
contributor to fungal conservation, particularly
the conservation of hypogeous fungi. Maria's
presentation on the World Heritage-listed
Bialowieza Forest – which dates back to 8000
BC and contains the last remaining stands of
European primeval lowland mixed forest where
1900 fungal species have been recorded – was a
reminder of the importance of conserving such
habitats for all biodiversity.
Maria Lawrynowicz examines a specimen.
The second, the President’s Award, was for outstanding promotion of fungal conservation was awarded
to Giuliana Furci for her abovementioned achievements through the formation of Fundación Fungi
and to Ahmed Abdel-Azeem for founding the Arab Society for Fungal conservation (received in his
absence by Mr Abdul-Rahman Ibrahim Mustafa and Ms Fatma Salem).
A diverse and interesting selection of posters was presented at the Congress and Maria Ławrynowicz
picked up a second award, the Congress Award for the best poster presentation for her poster entitled
Conservation Problems of Hypogeous Fungi. Highly commended prizes were awarded to The Fungal
Conservation Group of Latin America for its poster reviewing the status of fungal conservation in the
Caribbean, Central America and South America, and to Handan Cinar and colleagues for their poster
entitled Critically Endangered Species from Turkey.
In addition to the formal presentations, there was plenty of opportunity for informal interactions and
participants gleaned many ideas and strategies for fungal conservation including possibilities for
editing Wiki-websites to improve the profile of fungi; the importance of strategic timing in finding
windows of opportunity for inserting fungi into legislation; opportunities to tap into the corporate
sector; and remembering that while scientists provide the foundation of fungal knowledge, others are
necessary to mobilise public and political interest and activate conservation. After such an intensive
and inspiring week it's always a little sad to think that it will be another four years until we meet
again, at a location that is currently being determined – keep an eye on the ISFC website. But at least
for now, the dogs can return to their slumber and the fishermen can cast their lines undisturbed.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
The calm returns to Akyaka, Gökova Bay.
The official conference photo. See table on following page for a key to participants. Thanks to Boris Ivančević for providing the
image and compiling the list.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
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64.
De Dominicis Vincenzo
Diamandis Stephanos
Abdul-Rahman Ibrahim Mustafa
Perini Claudia
Pouliot Alison
Bölük Ezgin
Özbay Selen
Yılmaz Ferah
Ünal Güler
Daniele Inita
Keleş Emel
Şen İsmail
El-Fallal Amira Ali
Amir Al-Ghamriny
Nadia Al-Sheshtawy
Marwa Saad Fathi
Vasco Aida
Baş Sermenli Hayrünisa
Işıloğlu Mustafa
Minter David
Furci Giuliana Maria
McMullan-Fisher Sapphire
Apetorgbor Mary
Diamandis Paula
Ławrynowicz Maria
Hayova Vera
Franco Molano Anna Esperanza
Kryvomaz Tetiana
Harsh Nirmal Sudhir Kumar
Nadyeina Olga
Salem Fatma Mahmoud
Sell Indrek
Kaya Abdullah
Buchanan Peter
Doğan Hasan Hüseyin
Estupiñán Natalia Vargas
Gonou-Zagou Zacharoula
Mohammed Abdel-Latif Ayad
Akata Ilgaz
Triantafyllou Marina
Uzun Yusuf
Ngadin Andrew Anak
Çaka Şerife
Solak Halil
Ivančević Boris
Strack Betty
Sharp Cathy
Altuntaş Deniz
Çınar Handan
Yaratanakul Güngör Mehrican
Uzun Yasin
Güngör Halil
Sankaran K. V.
Cannon Paul
Senn-Irlet Beatrice
Mueller Greg
Quezada L. Maura
Karadelev Mitko
Sundberg Henrik
Svetasheva Tatyana
Taylor Joanne
Torrejon Herrero Miguel
Michaud Alain
Jürgens Katrin
Italy
Greece
Egypt
Italy
Australia / Switzerland
Turkey
Turkey
Turkey
Turkey
Latvia
Turkey
Turkey
Egypt
Egypt
Egypt
Egypt
Netherlands
Turkey
Turkey
UK
Chile
Australia
Ghana
Greece
Poland
Ukraine
Colombia
Ukraine
India
Ukraine
Egypt
Estonia
Turkey
New Zealand
Turkey
Colombia
Greece
Egypt
Turkey
Greece
Turkey
Malaysia
Turkey
Turkey
Serbia
USA
Zimbabwe
Turkey
Turkey
Turkey
Turkey
Turkey
India
UK
Switzerland
USA
Guatemala
Macedonia
Sweden
Russia
UK
Spain
France
Estonia
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Recovery times in tropical forests
A paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B by Philip Martin, Adrian Newton and James
Bullock (see http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2013.2236) has major implications for fungal and lichen
conservation. They demonstrated that the timescales necessary for restoration of tropical forests vary
for different organism and trophic groups. Above-ground biomass was the quickest to recover, while
below-ground biomass lagged behind. Tree species richness stabilised after only fifty years, but
epiphyte richness did not reach equivalence to undisturbed forest for any of the sites examined. The
take-home message is that just because your restored forests have trees in them, their associated
organisms are unlikely to recover in human-measurable timescales.
Biodiversity offsetting: can we swap biologically valuable areas?
Biodiversity offsetting is becoming big news. On the face of it, everything sounds reasonable:
protected land needed for human development (forestry, road building, housing development etc.) is
exchanged for other land in a more economically convenient location. In the UK, various schemes
have been proposed involving sweeteners (increased area to be donated for conservation purposes,
double the number of trees planted as are destroyed etc.) The devil is in the detail: ancient woodland
with all its fungal diversity (not to mention other organism groups) cannot be equated with secondary
woodland or newly planted sites – see news item above – and there are no clear indications that such
sites will become equivalent in biodiversity terms. The British Ecological Society has addressed this
issue, and stresses that offsetting needs to be assessed on the basis of the best scientific knowledge.
Their report can be accessed at this web address: http://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/wpcontent/uploads/Biodiversity-offsetting-BES-report-FINAL.pdf
European Charter on Fungi-gathering and Biodiversity
A Charter on fungi-gathering and biodiversity is in the final stages of approval by parties to the
Council of Europe’s Bern Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural
Habitats. The draft Recommendation to members can be accessed here. The key will be in the
implementation, but the words of the document are significant. It concludes with the following
statement:
[The Committee] RECOMMENDS Contracting Parties to the Convention, and INVITES Observer
States and Organisations, to:
1. Devote special attention to Fungi and micro-Fungi in the implementation of their international
obligations and also in the achievements of the 2020 targets adopted in the framework of the
Convention of Biological Diversity;
2. Take into consideration the European Charter on Fungi-gathering and Biodiversity and apply its
principles in the elaboration and implementation of their policies related to the sustainable use of
biodiversity;
3. Inform the Standing Committee on the measures taken for the implementation of this
recommendation.
If you are a citizen of the Bern convention states, then make sure your Government takes notice!
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Ahmed Abdel-Azeem (on left) and colleagues spread the word in the Arabian peninsula…..
Fungi, keystones of evolution and earth processes
Here follows a meeting report by Alison Pouliot (alison.pouliot@anu.edu.au) published on the Australian
Fungimap website (http://fungimap.org.au/).....
Fungimap folk are well aware of the challenges for a mushroom in a fauna-and-flora-centric world.
Along with the trials of rapidly changing environmental conditions on local and global scales, there
are also socio-cultural factors of trying to increase public and political awareness of the kingdom
Fungi. The Fungimap Conservation Committee and interested individuals are working to improve
the profile and conservation of fungi in Australia. One approach is to look at what's happening in
fungal conservation elsewhere in the world.
The British Mycological Society, British Lichen Society and Linnean Society of London recently held
a meeting, 'Fungi, keystones of evolution and earth processes'. The diverse program aimed to engage
a broad audience on the role of fungi in terrestrial evolution; their diversity, interactions and
ecological significance; as well as address scientific and political conservation issues. Advancements
in molecular taxonomic techniques and the value of fungi in the global economy were also presented.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
The symposium opened with a journey back in geological time with
Jonathan Leake asking us to consider the evolutionary history of
fungal-symbioses and the significance of mycorrhiza in driving
biogeochemical cycles.
Bryn Dentinger, head of mycology at the Royal Botanic Gardens
(RBG) Kew, then discussed the difficulty of estimating fungal diversity
and the daunting reality that fungal extinction rates likely exceed rates
of discovery and description. He also explored the promises and
pitfalls of next-generation sequencing, particularly in the context of
unseen and cryptic biodiversity.
Fig. 1. Ectomycorrhizal pine tree
grown
in
a
root
observation chamber on natural soil
at the University of Sheffield.
Image © Prof. JR Leake and Dr DP
Donnell.
FIG 2. A tiny selection of fungal diversity collected from an Ecuadorian
cloud forest. Image © Bryn Dentinger
Peter Crittenden and Rebecca Yahr
both presented cutting edge lichen
research.
Peter
discussed
lichen
dominance in boreal-artic environments
and their role as principal primary
producers in these systems. Rebecca
reported on her lichen research on the
building materials of pre-industrial
English houses, lifting the lid on the
huge magnitude of biodiversity losses in
the temperate zone before descriptive
science had really been born. Paul
Cannon and James Wearn from RBG
Kew introduced us to the role,
and
exploitation
of
FIG 3. Bow Cottage on the Holnicote Estate, Exmoor Somerset. significance
Thatched roofs like this can hold treasure-troves of pre-industrial endophytes, reminding us that almost
materials. Image © Dr Rebecca Yahr
every leaf in every corner of the world
contains endophytic fungi! David Minter gave us a fervent yet worrisome update on the current
representation of fungi by various conservation organisations, highlighting the commonplace
disregard for and misrepresentation of fungi.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
In the evening, truffle expert Jim Trappe
delivered an interesting exploration of how
Australia came to be the centre of global
truffle evolution and the curiosities of
mammalian mycophagy. Contemplating
such evolutionary significances seemed
especially apt in the room (according to the
commemorative plaque) where Charles
Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace first
discussed the concept of the origin of
species by natural selection. However,
apparently this was not the case and
neither Darwin nor Wallace were actually
present at that historic meeting and their
paper was read to the Fellows by Lyell and
Hooker. All the same, the historical setting
added an interesting dimension to
FIG 4: Truffle expert Jim Trappe at the Linnean Society.
discussions on a kingdom that had yet to Image: Alison Pouliot.
be properly recognised or defined in their
time.
Following the conference I visited RBG Kew and the appropriately named Fungarium that houses
over 1.2 million specimens. Bryn Dentinger and Begoña Aguirre-Hudson share the formidable task of
decrypting 'fungal identity', compounded by the subjectivities of interpretation, hieroglyphics of
mycologists' handwriting, and a further dimension introduced by recent molecular approaches.
FIG 5: Fungal specimen collections at the RBG Kew Fungarium. Images: Alison Pouliot
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Wandering through the gardens later in the
afternoon, I stumbled across a cluster of Craterellus
cornucopioides towering an astonishing three metres
high! Meanwhile up on the hill, giant Coprinus
comatus had begun to deliquesce. These particular
specimens were in fact woven from willow by
sculptor, Tom Hare. Fungal conservation needs
ways to access new advocates and the arts play an
important role in increasing the visibility of these
often less visible organisms, as well as re-enchanting
the fungal world. Hare has arguably captured both
an intriguing aesthetic while maintaining a level of
morphological accuracy.
FIG
6:
Fungal
sculptures
Images: Alison Pouliot
by
Tom
Hare.
The 7th of November marks a century since Alfred
Russel Wallace's death. I wonder how this
revolutionary naturalist, renowned for his
unconventional ideas and interest in both scientific
and social issues would tackle the challenges of
biodiversity loss in 2013. While fungal conservation
issues are inevitably complex, solutions are also
likely lie in unconventional and imaginative ideas
that incorporate both scientific and social
approaches.
*Many images available for use, please contact Alison for details. Thanks to Prof. JR Leake, Dr DP Donnell, Dr Bryn Dentinger and Dr
Rebecca Yahr for the use of their images in this blog.
Thanks also to Paul Cannon, David Minter and David Hawksworth for organising the symposium. The full program of talks is available here.
Announcement: 26th Congress on Nivicolous Myxomycetes
Yannick Mourgues (AMHVO) and Marianne Meyer & Espérance Bidaud (FMBDS):
Email contact myco48@gmail.com
L’Association Mycologique de la Haute Vallée d’Olt (AMHVO) et la Fédération Mycologique et
Botanique Dauphiné-Savoie (FMBDS) sont heureux de pouvoir vous inviter à la 26ème session des
journées d’étude et de recherche des espèces nivicoles des Myxomycètes. Celle-ci aura lieu dans le
département des Hautes-Alpes (05200) dans la commune d’Embrun, du dimanche 4 mai (arrivée à
partir de 16h00) au vendredi 9 mai 2014 (départ après le déjeuner), au Village Vacances du Chadenas
(chadenas-vacances.com).
Sites de prospection :
Les sites de prospections dépendront des conditions météorologiques, d’enneigement et d’accès, et
seront définitivement sélectionnés la semaine précédente. Ils seront choisis pour l’essentiel à moins
d’une demi-heure de route de l’hébergement : Col de la Coche, Station de ski de Crévoux, Mont
Guillaume, Vars… Le mercredi sera consacré à une sortie à la journée.
Le programme sera annoncé le dimanche soir de votre arrivée.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Articles
Bringing fungi into the conservation conversation: The Global
Fungal Red List Initiative
Gregory M. Mueller1, Anders Dahlberg2, and Michael Krikorev2
1
Chicago Botanic Garden, Glencoe, Illinois, USA: email gmueller@chicagobotanic.org
2
Swedish Species Information Center, Uppsala, Sweden
Species of fungi are not immune to the threats that put animal and plant species at risk, i.e., habitat
loss, loss of symbiotic hosts, pollution, over exploitation, and climate change. Yet fungal
conservation is not yet commonly discussed, considered, or acted upon by the conservation
community, and the conservation status of the vast majority of fungal species has not been assessed.
This greatly hinders the inclusion of fungi in conservation discussions, access to funding programs,
policy decisions, and conservation actions.
Conservation scientists, land managers, and other decision makers need information on the
conservation status and trends of organisms to carry out their work. The IUCN Red List provides
this information. The Red List is widely recognized as the most comprehensive, objective global
approach for evaluating the conservation status of animal, fungus and plant species. It has a large
impact on the setting of policies and priorities in nature conservation as conservation action is
commonly motivated and directed to species on the established and recognized Global Red List.
However, only three species of fungi are included among the 21,286 globally red listed species, two
lichens and one mushroom http://www.iucnredlist.org. The List is developed through data
submitted by organizations and individuals, and to date, there has been a lack of initiatives
nominating fungal species from the mycological community.
A concerted effort by the mycological community is needed to address this problem. Omission of
fungi in Red Lists invites the mistaken conclusion from conservation agencies that fungi are either not
threatened, are difficult to work with in conservation, or worse, that mycologists are not interested in
fungal conservation. Including fungi on the Red List communicates the presence and value of fungi
to politicians, decision-makers and other stake-holders including the public at large. Red list
evaluations also identify gaps in our knowledge of fungal biology and diversity – e.g., taxonomic
problems, distribution and autecological requirements, difficulty of identifying and defining
individuals, and, challenges of determining the drivers and constraints on population dynamics.
Even though fungal conservation has attracted significant interest in Europe since the European
Council for Conservation of Fungi (ECCF) was formed in 1985, fungal conservation at the
international level is a relatively new focus for both the mycological and conservation community.
Until recently, fungi were classified as one group under plants in the IUCN Species Survival
Commission (SSC) hierarchy. The elevation of Fungi to an independent area of focus with five
discrete SSC Specialist Groups during the 2009-2012 quadrennium was an important advance
http://www.iucn.org/about/work/programmes/species/who_we_are/ssc_specialist_groups_and_re
d_list_authorities_directory/fungi/. Significantly, IUCN members passed a resolution during the
2012 World Conservation Congress calling for “… all of the component parts of IUCN … and the
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
conservation movement more generally, to place much greater emphasis and priority on the
conservation of fungi …” (Box. 1).
Box 1. Action items from IUCN Resolution 33 overwhelmingly passed at the World
Conservation Congress. The full text of the resolution can be found at:
https://portals.iucn.org/docs/iucnpolicy/2012-resolutions/en/WCC-2012-Res-033EN%20Increasing%20the%20attention%20given%20to%20the%20conservation%20of%20fungi.
pdf
The World Conservation Congress, at its session in Jeju, Republic of Korea, 6–15 September
2012:
1.
CALLS ON all of the component parts of IUCN, including Members, Commissions and
the Secretariat, and the conservation movement more generally, to place much greater
emphasis and priority on the conservation of fungi, and to recognize that fungi constitute
a kingdom in their own right, and so the much-used phrase “animals and plants” is not a
sufficient description of all life on Earth;
2.
REQUESTS SSC, working with Members and partners as required, to greatly increase
the number of fungal assessments for the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, focusing,
among others, on:
a.
species dependent on highly threatened places, habitats or associations, and so
which are a priori likely to face high extinction risk;
b. species for which extinction risk data have already been compiled, e.g. the 3,117
North American taxa for which data are maintained by NatureServe;
c. groups of fungi that are believed to be effective indicators of the impacts of
major threatening processes such as nitrification;
d. well-known, charismatic fungi, including those of high value as food for
humans; and
e. statistically representative samples of some of the better known fungal groups;
and
3.
CALLS ON all governments to give greater priority to mycology, including mycological
taxonomy and the discovery and description of currently unknown species, and to
underline the importance of building greater capacity in the science of mycology
worldwide as an essential basis for future conservation measures.
There are now a number of national and regional fungal conservation committees, and the
International Society for Fungal Conservation was formed in August 2010. Symposia on fungal
conservation have now been held during several national and regional conferences and the 3rd
International Congress on Fungal Conservation took place in Turkey 11-15 November 2013
http://www.fungal-conservation.org/icfc3/. These are all important steps, but much more is needed
to coordinate this growing awareness and interest, and to provide a program for interested
mycologists to contribute to conservation efforts. To this end, the five IUCN SSC Fungal Specialist
Groups, with the collaboration of the IUCN SSC office and Red List Unit, and funding from the
Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, have developed the “Global Fungal Red List
Initiative.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
THE GLOBAL FUNGAL RED LIST INITIATIVE
The Initiative is designed to significantly add to the number of fungal species evaluated and submitted
for inclusion on the IUCN Global Red List. The initial goal is to engage the mycological community
(professional and amateur) and assess at least 300 fungal species by the end of 2015, ensuring global
representation and coverage of all major taxonomic groups. Nominations of fungal species (including
lichens) to be assessed, along with data required for making the assessment, are needed by the end of
2014 to meet this deadline. Details of the initiative were presented at the 2013 fungal conservation
congress in Turkey. The Initiative was well received. The exciting challenge will be to get as many
mycologists / lichenologists to contribute with their indispensable knowledge during 2014. The
success of this initiative depends on contributions from many in the mycological community.
The results of this initiative will highlight that:
•
Fungi are in need of conservation
•
Fungi can be, and need to be, part of the broader conservation agenda
The initiative aims to raise the awareness of fungal conservation among policy makers, the
conservation community, mycologists, and the general public. It will serve as forum to educate,
inspire, and engage the mycological community. The work will integrate fungi into general
conservation initiatives and open up funding opportunities to address listed fungal species.
The initiative consists of five steps: (1) develop a list of species to assess, (2) collect the data needed for
assessment, (3) undertake a preliminary assessment and identify data gaps; develop the finalized list
of species to be fully assessed, (4) perform assessment on the finalized list of species and submit the
results to IUCN for publication in the Global Red List, and, (5) disseminate the information to the
conservation and scientific community, and policy makers, publicize the results to the general public,
and build upon the work to further conservation efforts.
Develop a list of species to assess and collect the data needed for assessment.
Nominations of species for evaluation are encouraged from all members of the mycological /
lichenological community (professional and amateur). Species are nominated through the Initiative’s
interactive website http://iucn.ekoo.se/. On this site, one can nominate species and/or add
information to nominated species to ensure accuracy and completeness. The site facilitates
submission, adding comments, and formatting of data and images required for assessing the
conservation status of the nominated species.
The goal is to both develop a list of candidate species that are likely to be globally red listed if
evaluated, and to engage as much of the mycological community as possible. Rather than make a
priori decisions on which taxa or how many species to assess, the initiative encourages community
involvement with a goal to develop a list that is taxonomically and geographically inclusive and that
includes a sufficient number of good candidate species to ensure that a significant number of species
will be assessed. Recommendations for prioritization of species to nominate are provided in Box 2.
Undertake a preliminary assessment and identify data gaps; develop the finalized list of species to
be fully assessed. The five Fungal Specialist Groups, with the help of the IUCN Red List Unit, will
use the data submitted through the website to undertake a preliminary assessment and identify data
gaps.
A red list evaluation estimates the potential change in the species’ population size over time, aiming
to infer extinction risk. Data on the species distribution, population size, population trends,
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
generation length, and risks are needed to make an assessment. Dahlberg and Mueller (2011)
summarizes the basic aspects and usefulness of red-listing in a mycological context, and suggests
methods for fungal red-listing that are applicable to most fungal groups, even with limited information
on the species being considered.
Box 2. Suggested prioritization of species to nominate for assessment through the Global Fungal
Red List Initiative. This initiative aims to get as many fungal species assessed and published on
the global IUCN Red List in 2014 and 2015 as possible. Therefore, nominations of species with
adequate information on their ecology, distribution, population status and trend that are likely to
be globally red listed if evaluated are encouraged.
1.
Focus on:
a. Species that are rare and/or that have very restricted distributions.
b. Species dependent on highly threatened places, habitats or associations as they are a priori
likely to face high extinction risk.
c. Species that are regionally widely distributed but are typically found in low abundance
and that are steadily declining due to habitat decline (in area and quality) or other causes.
d. Species for which extinction risk data have already been compiled at a national or
regional level; thousands of macrofungi, lichenized fungi, and other fungal groups are
included in individual country red-lists.
e. Groups of fungi that are believed to be effective indicators of the impacts of major
threatening processes such as changing land use and nitrification.
f. Well-known, charismatic fungi, including those of high value as food for humans.
2.
Exclude:
a. Species with far too little data to be evaluated (these would be treated as NE, Not
Evaluated).
b. Species that can confidently be judged as having large, stable or increasing numbers of
localities/populations (these would be treated as Least Concern, LC).
c. For regional and national red lists, species with taxonomic uncertainties, that are not
indigenous, or that are only recently described (e.g., not regularly reproducing for less
then 10 years) (these would be treated as NA, Not Applicable).
Information from this preliminary assessment, together with the data forming the basis for the
evaluation (e.g., global distribution map, ecological information, description of threats, references
etc.) and photos will be available on the website. The community can supplement the preassessments with additional data and/or comments. The finalized list of species for evaluation will
consist of all the nominated species for which adequate data are available. Formal assessments will
be undertaken by members of the Fungal Specialist Groups, selected other mycologists, and IUCN
SSC and Red List Unit staff. The IUCN facilitators will ensure that the assessments meet all the
documentation requirements. Assessments will be completed before March 2015 to meet the
submission deadline required to have the species published on the IUCN Global Red List by autumn
2015.
Disseminate the information to the scientific and conservation community, publicize the results to
the general public, and build upon the work to further conservation efforts. Having species on the
published IUCN Red List is not the end to the process. Significant media attention will be possible
when a large numbers of fungi are included in the yearly updates to the Red List. Additionally, the
Red List website provides various ways for different audiences (general public, media, conservation
15
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
scientists, policy makers) to learn about the value of fungi and threats to their survival
(http://discover.iucnredlist.org).
Other sites like Arkive (http://www.arkive.org) and the
Encyclopedia of Life (http://eol.org) use data from the Red List to reach additional audiences.
This is an exciting and important time for fungal conservation. Fungi have the attention of IUCN and
other conservation organizations. It is critically important that the mycological community takes
advantage of the opportunities that this attention affords. The Global Fungal Red List Initiative is a
key component of the activities needed to significantly move fungal conservation forward.
Reference
Dahlberg, A. and G.M. Mueller. 2011. Applying IUCN Red Listing Criteria for assessing and
reporting on the conservation status of fungal species. Fungal Ecology 4: 147-162.
The Fungi Museum in Zagreb, Croatia
Vlado Jamnicky
Email: vladojamnicky@hotmail.co.uk
Last autumn a permanent exhibition of fungi, conceived as an education facility and museum, was
established in a central location in Zagreb, Croatia. This unique facility is now open to the public albeit so far only by arrangement as it is not fully staffed as yet. Founded and financed by Zagreb City
Council in collaboration with “Kamilo Blagaić” Mushroom Society, the museum is a brainchild of
Croatia's foremost mycologist, Professor Romano Božac, who will direct the institution.
Part of exhibition area
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Fungi for display are freeze dried in a laboratory
freeze dryer, donated by the Croatian Chamber of
Commerce. The process permanently retains the
shape and colour of specimens remarkably well.
So far there are 500+ taxa on display, with more
in deep freezers awaiting their turn in the freeze
dryer, and additions arriving regularly from some
of 3000 collectors across Croatia.
Amongst the displayed photographs by Prof.
Božac (see right)there is one of his truffle hunting
dogs. On one occasion they had found a specimen
of a novel species of the black truffle, since
named Tuber donnagotto, after the dogs, Donna
and Gotto.
There are other new taxa already on display,
including Pluteus aurantiogranulatus and Calocybe
gambosa var. cinerea.
See also the following links:
http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=159&solo=1208&l=e
http://www.gdkb.hr/aktualno/overview/77
http://www.gdkb.hr/edukacija
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
A good candidate for International Fungus Day
Abdel Al-Azeem
Lab. of Systematic Mycology, Botany Department, Faculty of Science, University of Suez Canal,
Ismailia 41522, Egypt. Email: zemo3000@yahoo.com
Temple of Hathor, Dandara, Qena, Upper Egypt.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Documentation of the world fungi may be dated back to 4500 B.C., when ancient Egyptians produced
a number of hieroglyphic depictions of plants (many of which are psychedelic) on walls and within
texts throughout Egypt. Temples with countless pillars are shaped like huge mushrooms with tall
stems, umbrella caps, and mushroom engravings distributed all over the country. These are shaped
like Amanita sporophores, and some like Psilocybe. Others look like bracket fungi and are decorated
with pictures of an incredible variety of plants (Arthur 2000). In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, the
Papyrus of Ani (Budge 1967), mushrooms are called “the food of the gods,” or “celestial food” and
“the flesh of the gods.”
The Great Temple at Abu Simbel, which took about twenty years to build, was completed around
year 24 of the reign of Rameses the Great (which corresponds to 1265 BCE). It was dedicated to the
gods Amun, Ra-Horakhty, and Ptah, as well as to the deified Rameses himself. It is generally
considered the grandest and most beautiful of the temples commissioned during the reign of Rameses
II, and one of the most beautiful in Egypt.
Four colossal 20 meter statues of the pharaoh with the double Atef crown of Upper and Lower Egypt
decorate the facade of the temple, which is 35 meters wide and is topped by a frieze with 22 baboons,
worshippers of the sun.
It is believed that the axis of the temple was positioned by the ancient Egyptian architects in such a
way that on October 22 and February 22, the rays of the sun would penetrate the sanctuary and
illuminate the sculptures on the back wall, except for the statue of Ptah, the god connected with the
Underworld, who always remained in the dark. People gather at Abu Simbel to witness this
remarkable sight, on October 21 and February 21.
These dates are allegedly the king's birthday and coronation day respectively, but there is no evidence
to support this, though it is quite logical to assume that these dates had some relation to a great event,
such as the jubilee celebrating the thirtieth anniversary of the pharaoh's rule.
In fact, according to calculations made on the basis of the heliacal rising of the star Sirius (Sothis) and
inscriptions found by archaeologists, this date must have been October 22. This image of the king was
enhanced and revitalized by the energy of the solar star, and the deified Ramesses the Great could
take his place next to Amun Ra and Ra-Horakhty.
Due to the displacement of the temple and/or the accumulated drift of the Tropic of Cancer during
the past 3,280 years, it is widely believed that each of these two events has moved one day closer to
the Solstice, so they would be occurring on October 22 and February 20 (60 days before and 60 days
after the Solstice, respectively).
Based on the aforementioned information I suggested the international fungus day to be on October
22. This is due to the role of Egypt in documentation and conservation of fungi since ancient time and
I think Ramses II is one of the famous pharaohs and solar event in The Great Temple at Abu Simbel
is a cosmopolitan one.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Journey Across Fungal Conservation in Serbia
Boris Ivančević
Natural History Museum, Belgrade, Serbia. E-mail: i.boris@beotel.net
The first issue of Fungal Conservation carried a very interesting article (Abdel-Azeem & Minter 2011)
providing an analysis and evaluation of the extent to which fungi and care for their conservation
featured in national action plans and reports which countries had drawn in accordance with Rio
Convention. A clear and simple five-criterion rating system was presented, named the Micheli Guide
to Fungal Conservation. We were given yet another welcome tool that mycologists may use to exert
more influence on those responsible for creating the actual policy of conservation of nature and
biodiversity. Under the Micheli Guide rating system, Serbia was given the leading position among
various countries on account of its concern for fungi in its national biodiversity action plan. Since we
are talking about a country that has recently gone through very difficult times, a positive rating of
official national documents may have come as a surprise to those unacquainted with the mycological
tradition in this country and the efforts to protect the fungi made in the past two and a half decades.
However, if we look at the last hundred or so years of mycology in Serbia, we will see a delicate
thread woven by a small number of mycologists. Despite circumstances, continuity has been
preserved, and Serbian mycologists today endeavour, standing on the shoulders of their predecessors,
to protect the rich world of fungi and preserve it for future generations.
Foundations and tradition
In Serbian culture and tradition, people neither like nor dislike mushrooms, with respect to their use
as food. It is worth noting that various kinds of mushrooms may be bought on local market stands.
Language is fairly rich in folk names for various mushrooms (Hadžić & Vukojević 2008; Vukojević &
Hadžić 2013), and ethnographic literature abounds in very old data on fungi (Ivančević 1986). We
owe tremendous respect to the pioneers of mycology from the 19th and early 20th centuries in Serbia.
They worked under far more difficult conditions than their counterparts in western Europe, with
whom they collaborated at the time of dynamic development of mycology as a new biological
discipline. Numerous fungal taxa related to Serbia, even some fungal genera, were named after local
mycologists in honour of their work, such as Wojnowicia Saccardo 1892 or Ranojevicia Bubak 1910.
Vojteh Lindtner, 1904-1965, a
mycologist who discovered and
described many new fungal taxa
in Serbia and founded the
National Herbarium of Fungi.
In the course of the 20th century, the territory of Serbia became
part of Yugoslavia. There were many researchers studying
different groups of fungi, lichens, pathogenic fungi, wood-decay
fungi, macromycetes, myxomycetes (ex fungi), fungal ecology,
physiology or biochemistry of fungi, etc. We shall mention here
only the towering figure of Vojteh Lindtner, owing to whose
hard work the largest mycological collection in the former
Yugoslavia was compiled at the Natural History Museum in
Belgrade (BEO) between 1935 and 1965. Today this collection
forms the central part of the Serbian National Fungarium,
boasting several tens of thousands of samples, a large number of
holotypes, isotypes, topotypes and other valuable specimens
including the oldest specimens collected by researchers from 19
century. Many new species were described by Lindtner himself
or in cooperation with other mycologists. The genus Lindtneria
Pilát 1938 was named after him, in honour of his work. After
Lindtner, the macromycetes of Yugoslavia and Serbia were
studied by the esteemed Milica Tortić from Zagreb, whom some
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
European mycologists will remember with reverence. At the time, mycology was treated mostly as
part of botany in schools and universities. However, numerous scientific and research papers on fungi
were published.
Maria Muntañola-Cvetković, a Belgrade University Professor, was the first in
Serbia to explicitly recognise fungi as a separate kingdom, in accordance with
the tendencies prevalent in the world. Together with her team, she described a
dozen new fungal taxa (Aspergillus aureolatus Munt.-Cvetk. & Bata 1964;
Penicillium jugoslavicum C. Ramírez & Munt. 1964; Aspergillus protuberus Munt.Cvetk. 1968; Diaporthe / Phomopsis helianthi Munt.-Cvetk. et al 1981 etc.) and
raised an entire generation of mycologists. In her comprehensive survey of new
concepts in mycology (Muntañola-Cvetković 1978), she described numerous
fungal features differentiating fungi from plants and animals and quoted the
then current taxonomic division of the living world according to Ainsworth Professor
Maria
(1973). That paper and the university textbook on general mycology that Muntañola-Cvetkovic,
followed (Muntañola-Cvetković 1987), paved the road to distinguishing the who in the late
introduced
fungal kingdom from the plant kingdom in the educational system in Serbia. seventies
to Serbia the concept
From then on, school textbooks described the fungi as a separate kingdom, and of a separate position
the public began to grow accustomed to that hitherto weird idea. It was an of fungi in the living
extremely important moment that provided a special position for fungi and their world
treatment separate from flora and fauna, which finally resulted in a positive assessment in the Micheli
Guide!
Flora, Fauna and Fungia
The break-up of Yugoslavia had tragic consequences for the
whole society, even science (Stone 2000). Mycology continued
to develop, albeit at a slower pace. When a comprehensive
monograph on biodiversity of Serbia and Montenegro
(Stevanović & Vasić 1995) was published, it contained
separate chapters on fungi (Ivančević 1995) and lichens (Savić
1995) as separate parts of biodiversity. The book proposed a
list of globally significant fungal taxa, for which the state of
Serbia should have special responsibility in its territory, as well
as specific measures for conservation of these and all other
macromycetes and lichens. In order to underscore their
uniqueness, the chapter on fungi introduced the term fungia as
a counterpart to the terms flora and fauna, which has since
become current in various publications and scientific papers in
Psilocybe serbica (isotype) exicate from the
Serbia. This book, although nowadays fairly old, has been of
Natural History Museum in Belgrade –
enormous importance, as it has since been used as a starting
new species found by Meinhard Moser and
point in making biodiversity conservation strategies and
V. Lindtner in 1963.
similar documents drawn by the state administration at the
national level. Accordingly, the Action Plan evaluated by Azeem & Minter (2011), as stated in the
Plan itself (Radović & Kozomara 2011), was built around that study. The Action Plan was issued by
the Government of Serbia in compliance with the international agreements and the Serbian Law on
Ratification of the Convention on Biological Diversity, and was drawn up by a group of authors. The
topics related to biodiversity were covered without involvement of mycologists, but the biologists
involved consistently applied the principles on the division of the living world that had been accepted
in Serbia. The fungi were therefore treated as a separate kingdom.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Beginning of official fungal conservation
People started picking edible commercial mushrooms on a large scale in Yugoslavia in the mid
eighties, mainly for export to Western Europe. Because the greatest part of those mushrooms came
from the territory of Serbia, it was in Serbia that the first regulations concerning market control and
fungal conservation were made. Those regulations and the measures they provided for were not ideal
and they have been amended in the endeavour to achieve an optimum solution for the conservation
and management of fungi (Ivančević et al 2012). Still, it must be said that it was early on that the state
administration made an effort at fungal conservation. The next decade saw the founding of the
Mycological Society of Serbia in 1992, the oldest mycological organisation in Serbia, recognised by
the Serbian Ministry of Science as the national representative society of mycologists. The Society was
presented internationally at the XI Congress of European Mycologists at Kew, London, when Serbia
became involved in the work of the ECCF through its national representative (Høiland 1993). The
first Preliminary Red List of fungi in Serbia (Ivančević 1998) was compiled and published over the
next several years. The academic sphere also began to take more interest in mycology. In addition to
the general course in mycology, the Biological Faculty in Belgrade introduced several specialised
courses around that time, such as Physiology of Fungi, Basic Biochemistry and Genetics of Fungi,
Biology of Medicinal and Edible Fungi, Ecology and Diversity of Fungi, Lichens. The Agricultural
Faculty in Belgrade introduced General Mycology course with around 85 students per year, and
Mycology was studied in detail at Belgrade faculties of Forestry and Pharmacy, as well as at
universities in other cities such as Novi Sad, Kragujevac, etc.
A few years ago, the state administration finally accepted
the stand espoused by mycologists that rare and
threatened fungi need to be included in the environmental
protection programmes. A new Nature Conservation
Law (2009) was adopted. Mushrooms were listed as a
separate group of organisms, different from and on a par
with plants and animals. The provisions relative to the
strictly protected species finally allowed inclusion of rare
and endangered species of fungi, in addition to the
commercial species that had previously been the only
ones protected under the Environmental Law. Provisions
were also made for some hypogeous species, owing to the
recent intensive studies into the truffles. This Law finally
allowed for evaluation of fungi to be officially included in
environmental protection procedures. The Law provided
that fungi on their merit alone could be a reason to single
out and protect a certain area, even though other
biodiversity components were not under threat. The
assessment of the value a certain area holds for its fungal
populations has recently been included in regular
Poster for an exhibition of the Mycological
procedures performed by state agencies dealing with
Society of Serbia dedicated to conservation of
fungal habitats with earthstars as the flag species,
nature conservation and protection in Serbia.
from 2010. Title reads "Do not destroy the
Standardised methodology developed for such assessment
forests, for you will extinguish the stars!"
has recently been presented at III International Congress
of Fungal Conservation (Ivančević 2013). Furthermore,
under the new Law, protective measures were applied to a forest near Belgrade, covering an area of
21ha, solely due to the fact that it provided habitat to a number of rare fungi and evaluated by
mycologists as a Prime Mushroom Area with Myriostoma coliforme being the flag species (Ivančević
2005).
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
The new millennium
Over the past dozen years, several teams in Serbia have been researching successfully the medicinal
fungi and their components isolated from the fungi found in natural habitats in Serbia, as well as their
antimicrobial and antioxidative effects (Soković et al 2006; Glamočlija et al 2009; Savić et al 2011;
Klaus et al 2011a,b; etc). Other groups have also been studied, such as myxomycetes, traditionally
treated as “honorary fungi”. Around a hundred species of myxomycetes have been recorded in Serbia
(Ing & Ivančević 2000), and the largest collection is housed in the National Fungarium at the Natural
History Museum in Belgrade (BEO). The fungarium also boasts the largest national collection of
lichenised fungi, whose distribution and species inventory for Serbia have been studied by Savić &
Tibell (2006). New information system and database with GIS capabilities have been developed for
the National fungi collection.
The first data on the wealth of truffles in Serbian forests go back to 1777 (Milenković 1998). The
recent studies of the distribution of hypogeous fungi and their diversity (Milenković 1998; Marjanović
et al 2010) are also worth noting. They have resulted in a collection of around 1000 specimens,
including more than 70 species and varieties from Serbia, also housed in the BEO, and even a
discovery of a new species Tuber petrophilum, with an interesting and specific ecology and distribution
in a small area in western Serbia (Milenković et al. 2014). The area around the locus classicus of this
species was automatically protected under the new law. Nowadays, Tuber magnatum, the famous
white truffle, is harvested in Serbia and exported to Italy, which is a little known fact.
Around dozen different amateur NGO associations of mushroomers came into being around the turn
of the century. These associations have organised over hundred exhibitions of fungi in various public
premises and museum galleries throughout Serbia and these exhibitions have invariably attracted
huge attention. A number of books and guides to mushrooms for general audiences have also been
published, placing the emphasis on the characteristics of Serbian fungi (including Davidović 2007,
Hadžić 2002, Hadžić & Vukojević 2008, Radić 2002, Uzelac 2009, Vukojević and Hadžić 2013 and
others). These publications followed in the footsteps of similar editions published in Serbia in the
times of Yugoslavia, such as “Fungi of Yugoslavia” (Focht 1979). The Mycological Society of Serbia
has issued its own general audience science magazine and newsletter World of Fungi (in Serbian).
This popularization of mushrooms and their slightly more frequent appearance in the media have
made the general public more interested in fungi.
Milestones in the conservation of fungi in Serbia
1978 – The concept of a separate position of fungi in the living world.
1991 – First legal provisions on fungal protection in Serbia.
1995 – New term Fungia instead of “fungal flora” in official document.
1997 – Preliminary Red list of Fungi.
1999 – First legal document to list fungi separately from plants.
2005 – First area officially proposed for protection for fungi.
2009 – First provisions for non-commercial fungi - 107 protected fungal taxa. Rare and
threatened fungi included in the official state conservation programmes.
2010–2013 – Assessment of fungal component of biodiversity included in
conservation programmes
state
The arduous path to the ears of the state administration is certainly not a short or a solitary one. The
success Serbian mycology has achieved advancing along that path was recognised under the Micheli
Guide. It would be unfair for any single individual to claim the credit for this for themselves alone on
24
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
the basis of some recent activities. The progress in Serbian conservation legislation and good Micheli
results are a consequence of a long evolution and a serious effort made by a number of dedicated
mycologists over several decades. And much more remains to be done for proper fungal conservation
that the kingdom of fungi truly requires.
This text does not aim to give a full account and assessment of the tradition and history of mycology
and fungal conservation in Serbia, or to cite bibliography of several hundred mycological works
stretching from the nineteenth century to the present day. Much has therefore been left out, such as
mycological studies in forestry, or numerous individual papers on distribution of macromycetes etc.
Our wish was merely to shed some light on this subject and hopefully kindle interest among the
readers who had little information about mycology and development of fungal conservation in Serbia.
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Soković M. & van Griensven L. (2006): Antimicrobial activity of essential oils and their components
against the three major pathogens of the cultivated button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus. European
Journal of Plant Pathology 116: 211-224.
Stevanović V. & Vasić V. (eds.) (1995): Biodiversity of Yugoslavia with an overview of species of international
importance. Faculty of Biology and Ecolibri, Belgrade. (In Serbian)
Stone, R. (2000): Help needed to rebuild science in Yugoslavia. Science 290(5492): 690 - 695.
Uzelac B. (2009): Fungi of Serbia and Western Balkans. BGV Logik, Belgrade. (In Serbian)
Vukojević J. & Hadžić I. (2013): Atlas gljiva i internacionalni rečnik narodnih imena gljiva / Atlas of
mushrooms. Biološki fakultet, Beograd.
Zakon o zaštiti prirode. Službeni glasnik Republike Srbije 36, 12.05.2009. [Serbian Nature
Conservation Law]
Some Critically Endangered Species From Turkey
Handan Çinar, Hayrünisa Baş Sermenli & Mustafa Işiloğlu
Department of Biyology, Faculty of Science, Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University, Kötekli, Muğla,
Turkey. E-mail: h.platanus@gmail.com
Turkey is a large peninsula that situated between south-eastern Europe and Asia. It has three
phytogeographical regions which are Euro-Siberian, Mediterranean and Irano-Turanien with different
climate features. Diverse topographic structure and a wide range of temperatures have created great
macrofungal diversity.
In ongoing taxonomic studies, approximately 2500 species have already been reported from
Turkey. Among these species, 272 taxa are categorised and nine species are classified as critically
endangered according to IUCN red list guide lines (Işıloğlu et al, 2004). In this study, six of those
critically endangered species of larger fungi are described, with information about their habitats and
26
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
distribution in Turkey. Their status suggests that their populations are threatened with extinction in
Turkey, due to rapid population decline or very small population size (IUCN, 2013).
Disciotis venosa
Fruiting body 5-20 cm across, saucer-shaped to flat and with a short stalk, strongly grainy, veined
toward the centre and pale to dark brown. External surface whitish to dark yellow with smooth
surface and wrinkled, ribbed towards the base. When fresh fragile, 3-10 mm thick, with an odour like
chlorine and mild taste. Grows singly or in group. Paraphyses 8-10 µm, light brown and septate, some
of them segmented toward the base. Asci eight-spored, 320×20 µm. Ascospores 19-24×12-14 µm,
hyaline, ellipsoidal, smooth, sometimes with small droplets at both ends outside the spore wall.
Habitat among herbs and mossy soil, near the floodplain, hedges. In many years occurring in masses
in April-May.
Species name
Collector
District
Year
İzmir
F. Yılmaz Ersel
2004
A.Afyon
Konya-Derbent
1997
Disciotis venosa
M. Işıloğlu
K. B Anadolu
1998
M. H. Solak
Balıkesir
2002
F. Gücin
Kozak
1995
Geopora cooperi forma cooperi
Fruiting body 1-7 cm across, light to dark brown, globose or partially pulvinate, surface strongly
warted, ochre to dark brown, covered with setae. Inner surface cerebriform, hymenium tissue whitish
to light brown, odour aromatic with mild taste. Ascospores 19-26×13-16 µm, broadly ellipsoidal,
smooth, thick-walled with a central oil droplet. Habitat commonly under conifers, growing in groups
from early spring to late summer and autumn.
Species name
Collector
District
Year
Geopora cooperi forma cooperi
İzmir
M. H. Solak
2002
Myriostoma coliforme
Fruiting body 2-10 cm across, globose. When they mature, the exoperidium breaks into 7 to 14 rays
which curve back and push the fruit body up. The inner pseudoparenchymatous layer is fleshy and
thick pale yellow to dark brown. Basidiospores 4×6 µ in size, brown, globose, irregularly warted.
Habitat in deciduous forests and mixed forests, gardens and grazed grasslands.
Species name
Collector
District
Year
A.Asan
Edirne
2002
Myriostoma coliforme
S. Aktaş
Antalya
2006
H.H. Doğan
Türkiye
2011
Pseudohydnum gelatinosum
Fruiting body 25-50 mm across, flat to flabellar, sometimes conchate, stipitate. Surface roughfurfuraceous, toward margin smooth and crinkly, white or seldom greyish to dark brown. Hymenium
whitish, intensely spinose, the spines to 5 mm long. Flesh soft, odourless, tasteless, imbricate.
Basidiospores 5-6×4-6 µm, hyaline, globose to subglobose, smooth. Hyphobasidia pyriform to
oblong, septate, 10-15×7-9 µm, with 4 epibasidia, cystidia not seen, septa with clamps. Habitat on
very rotten conifer wood, especially on stumps, in summer and autumn.
Species name
Collector
District
Year
F.Gücin
Bursa
1996
M.H. Solak
K.B. Anadolu
1997
Maraş
A.Kaya
2006
Pseudohydnum gelatinosum
M. Abatay
Antalya
1988
I.Akata
Ilgaz
2010
C. Öztürk
Karaman
2001
S. Sümer
Bolu
1982
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Sarcoscypha coccinea
Fruiting body 1-7 cm, initially goblet shaped, then cup to saucer shaped or oval, hymenium vermilion
to blood red, surface pinkish to ochre, with whitish granular flakes, margin remaining turned inward
for a long time, with a short to very long stem, growing singly or in groups. Paraphyses thin,
cylindrical, seldom septate, with red granular contents which turn green with iodine. Asci eightspored, 400-450×12-16 µm, uniseriate. Ascospores 30-40×9-12 µm, ellipsoidal, hyaline, smooth,
usually with many small droplets. Habitat on dead wood and on branches of broadleaved trees, under
Alnus, Acer, Salix and Ulmus in damp places in hilly or montane elevations, also in alder groves;
fruiting February-May.
Species name
Collector
District
Year
M. H. Solak
Çanakkale
2003
M. H. Solak
K.B. Anadolu
1997
A.Pekşen
Samsun
2000
Sarcoscypha coccinea
A.Pekşen
Samsun
2003
K.Gezer
Antalya
2000
M. Işıloğlu
Antalya
1997
K. Gezer
Denizli
2007
Tricholoma sulphureum
Fruiting body 2-8 cm across, when young hemispherical, then convex, sometimes conic, margin
acute, surface smooth, dull, sulphur yellow to ochre brown and floccose toward the center. Flesh
sulphur yellow, thin, with a disgusting odour, taste mild. Lamellae sulphur yellow, broad, notched,
margin smooth. Stipe 25-90 × 8-20 mm, cylindrical, ventricose or clavate, sulphur yellow with grey to
purple-reddish longitudinal fibrils, base whitish, corticate, fragile. Solitary to gregarious.
Basidiospores 8-11×5-7 µm, hyaline, broadly ellipsoidal to amygdaliform, smooth. Basidia with 4
sterigmata and clamp connection, 35-45×9-10 µm and cylindric-clavate. Cystidia not seen. Marginal
cells hyphoid, 21-26×2-4 µm. Habitat in hardwood and coniferous forests, among leaf or needle litter,
summer and autumn.
Species name
Author
District
Year
F.Yılmaz
Balıkesir
1997
M.H. Solak
Balıkesir
2002
D. Yağız
Karabük
2005
Tricholoma sulphureum
A.Afyon
Konya1996
Beyşehir
E.Turgut
Samsun
2006
A.Pekşen
Samsun
2003
References
Işıloğlu, M., Baş, H. and Allı, H., (2004). Some Critically Endangered Taxa From Turkey.
IUCN (2013) Guidelines for Using the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, Version 10.1, Red List.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Some Endangered Taxa From Turkey
K. Selen Özbay, Hayrünisa Baş Sermenli & Mustafa Işiloğlu
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University, Kötekli, Muğla, Turkey.
E-mail: selenozbay@hotmail.com
In this study, four endangered Turkish macrofungi taxaare presented, with descriptions and
distributions.
In recent decades, according to the IUCN Red List categories and criteria, fungal red-list assessments
have been produced in many European countries. The Endangered category includes species
considered to be facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild, and it is determined according to
criteria such as reduction in population size, area of occupancy, and/or a population size estimated
to number fewer than 250 mature individuals. In Turkey, a total of 25 macrofungi species are in this
endangered category (Işıloğlu et al., 2004).
Abortiporus biennis
Fruiting body turbinate, also irregularly undulating and lobed when old, 85-215 mm in diameter.
Upper surface of pileus smooth, indistinctly undulating to partially pitted, velutinous-tomentose,
firstly whitish, then ochre to brown, margin thin and undulating-lobed, white before, spotting redbrown when handled or brushed, lower surface labyrinthine-porose, at first whitish, blotched reddishbrown when damaged, pores 0.3-1 mm diam., tube length 2-5 mm. Stipe cylindric-conic, average 25
mm thick, 60 mm long. Basidiospores 4-6×3-4.5 µm, ellipsoidal, smooth, hyaline, thin-walled, with
drops. Chlamydospores 3-5×3-4 µm, subglobose, thick-walled, with drops. Basidia narrowly clavate,
17-34 × 4.5-6 µm, with 4 sterigmata and basal clamp. Gloeocystidia cylindrical, 30-100 × 6-10 µm,
containing drops. Habitat on soil in pastures, gardens, park grounds and forests, always associated
with buried wood such as stumps.
Province
Collector
Year
Muğla(Akyaka)
M.Işıloğlu
1995
Artvin (Ardanuç-Cevizli)
K.Demirel
1999
H.H.Doğan et al.
Karaman-Alanya
2005
Kahramanmaraş (Hacıömer village)
A.Kaya et al.
2009
Lactarius luteolus
Cap convex, 3-6 cm across, buff becoming brownish in age, velvety, dry, with a white bloom. Gills
white to cream, becoming yellowish to brown when handled, adnate to subdecurrent. Stem 20-60 x 510 mm, whitish to buff spotting brown, dry, with a bloom. Flesh whitish spotting brown. Latex white,
plentiful, sticky. Odour strong and foetid. Taste mild. Basidiospores 7-8.5 x 5-6 μm, ellipsoid,
amyloid, ornamented with isolated warts, spore print white to cream. Habitat on soil in broadleaved
and mixed woods.
Province
Collector
Year
Trabzon(Maçka)
E.Sesli
1993
Giresun (Dereli)
E.Sesli
2002
M.Işıloğlu et al
Trabzon
2004
Leucocoprinus brebisonii
Cap 2-3 cm across, hemispherical when young, then flattened, slightly umbonate, the whole cap is
dark brown to nearly black when in bud, cuticle breaking into minute erect scales as the cap expands.
Stem 25-50×2-4 mm, fibrillose, pure white with membranous ring and blackish scales towards the
base. Flesh white and thin. Smell strongly fungusy. Gills free, crowded, pure white. Basidiospores:
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
broadly elliptic or ovoid with a germ-pore 6-8.5 x 4-5 µm. Spore print white. Cheilocystidia thinwalled, clavate to obtusely fusiform, hyaline, surface squamules formed of tufts of elongated hairs.
Habitat in coniferous woods, in autumn.
Province
Name of Author
Year
M.Işıloğlu and N. Öder
Osmaniye (Zorkun Yaylası)
1995
M.Işıloğlu and N. Öder
Malatya
1995
Antalya (Düzlerçamı, Kemer,Alanya)
K.Gezer
2000
İ.Türkekul
Tokat
2000
Balıkesir
M.H.Solak et al.
2002
Çanakkale (Kazdağı, Bigadiç)
M.Öner and T.Gezer
2004
İzmir (Kozak plateau, Yukarıbey village, Çamurluklar F.Yılmaz Ersel and M.H.Solak 2004
area
Pithya vulgaris
Fruiting body 4.5-15 mm across, cup or disc-shaped, hymenium pale yellow to orange, smooth, outer
surface and margin lighter and frosted with white, base with white felty mycelium, rather shortstemmed. Asci 8-spored, 210-285 x 11.5-15 µm. Ascospores 10.5-15 µm, hyaline, smooth, normally
with one guttule. Habitat singly or gregariously in mixed forest of Abies sp. and Cedrus libani.
Province
Name of Author
Year
H.H.Doğan and M.Işıloğlu
Karaman (Ermenek Damlaçalı District)
2002
References
Işıloğlu, M., Baş, H. and Allı, H., (2004). Some Critically Endangered Taxa From Turkey.
B. Senn-Irlet, J. Heilmann-Clausen, D. Genney and A. Dahlberg, 2007. Guidance for Conservation of
Macrofungi in Europe pp. 2-39.
Fungi from forests for food, medicine and livelihood: conservation
issues in India
N.S.K. Harsh
Forest Pathology Division, Forest Research Institute, Indian Council of Forestry Research &
Education, P. O. New Forest, Dehradun-248006, India. Email: nirmalharsh57@gmail.com
Human activities have caused an unprecedented decline in biodiversity during the past half-century.
The growth of large urban areas, construction activities such as dams, buildings and roads,
encroachment on vast areas of forest lands for extension of arable expanses and mining operations are
examples of direct onslaughts on nature which have steadily depleted biodiversity. Beside this natural
calamities like landslides, and cloud bursts in the fragile Himalayan region is disturbing the habitat of
many fungi. Unsustainable collection and overexploitation of biological resources further aggravates
the situation. Further, poorly controlled legal trade and illegal trafficking pose threats to in situ
conservation of biodiversity.
Fungi are the source of food, medicine and livelihood for the people living in and around
Indian forests. There are many edible and other fungi (mushrooms) collected, consumed and also
marketed in these areas. Unsystematic collection leads to overexploitation and may result in
extinction of one or more species.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Termitomyces spp.
Some edible fungi collected and sold in the tribal markets in central India during growing season
(monsoon months) are species of Termitomyces associated with termite fungal combs and mounds
(Harsh et al. 1996, 2000). Our studies revealed that nearly 2.5 tonnes of this mushroom were
estimated to be sold in 15 local tribal markets in central India during one growing season (Harsh et al.
1993). It has been observed that over the years the quantity coming to the market is on decline. It
came to the knowledge that ant hills (termite mounds) are worshipped by the tribal in central India on
a special day during rainy season called Nag Panchami (Nag = Cobra; Panchami = fifth day of Savan
(July – August) month of the Hindu calendar) as they are believed to be the homes of cobras. It is also
a tradition among these people that Termitomyces growing on those ant hills which are worshipped are
neither collected nor eaten. On hindsight it may be considered as a conservation approach for the
fungus.
Termitomyces heimi being sold in a tribal market in central India
Astraeus hygrometricus
Another wild fungus which is collected and sold in market in tribal areas in central and north India is
Astraeus hygrometricus, locally called as phutphuta or putput. It occurs in the forests of Shorea robusta
trees. It is among the first edible fungi to appear in rainy season (July – August). Women, men and
children are involved in collection and sale. Nearly 200 kg was brought this year in one location in
Uttar Pradesh – Gorakhpur market (information shared by Mr. Mohammed Juber, a local mushroom
enthusiast). It is cooked and tastes like egg curry. It has been observed that its excessive collection is
impacting on tree health because its subterranean nature means that sporophores are dug up, thus
disturbing the soil cover which gets further eroded in following rains thus exposing the roots to
desiccation and injuries. A field forester informed that more fruit bodies are observed after fire on the
forest floor. As the fungus grows in ectomycorrhizal association with its host tree Shorea robusta, any
adverse effect on the tree would certainly affect the fungus.
Astraeus hygrometricus being sold in the market
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Morchella spp.
Morels (Morchella esculenta) are edible fungi collected from hills of north India which have great global
significance due to their extraordinary taste and flavour. Nearly 65 tonnes of dry morels are exported
to international markets from India. However, recent reports suggest that the quantity is declining.
While climate change is attributed to this decline, overexploitation and habitat destruction cannot be
ruled out. Morchella spp. growing are among the most valued wild mushrooms in Western Europe,
particularly France, Germany, Italy and Switzerland. International trade in dried morels is estimated
to be 150 tons annually. The suppliers are India, China, Turkey, Pakistan, North America and
Eastern Europe. Pakistan and India are the main producing countries, each producing about 50
tonnes of dry morels annually (equivalent to fresh morels of 500 tonnes), all of which is exported.
Total world trade in morels is of the order of US$ 50 to 60 million (FAO 1995). In Himachal Pradesh
and Jammu & Kashmir, two north Indian states, morels (gucchi) are collected systematically during
the growing seasons (spring and sometimes after rainy season) and sold to established markets both
fresh and as dried mushrooms (Kumar & Sharma 2010). Online sale occurs from Himachal Pradesh
(such as www.alibaba.com; www.tradeindia.com; www.agriculturesource.com).
Morchella esculenta (photo source ohapbio12.pbworks.com)
Morels are the only fungi which have been given legal status in India as Minor Forest Produce, in
Himachal Pradesh (one of 38 permitted - GOVERNMENT NOTIFICATION NO. FFE-B-G(9)-9 /
94- II DATED 28.2.2003). The Pradhans (Village Heads) of the Gram Panchayats (Village Bodies) in
Himachal Pradesh have been given the right as Forest Officers to issue permits for transport of minor
forest produce collected from the forests in the concerned panchayats (the Himachal Pradesh Forest
Produce Transit (Land Routes) Rules, notified vide Notification No. Fts. (A)/3-1/77 dated
20.11.1978 and published in the Rajpatra, Himachal Pradesh (Extra Ordinary) dated 4th March,
1978). The local panchayat charge a fee of Rs.10,000 per 100 kg for selling morels in the market. But
a major chunk of the produce reaches the market clandestinely, an official said.
A news item appearing in one of the national newspapers ‘The Times of India’ (March 04,
2013) reported “Climate change takes toll on morel mushroom” as it states that guchhi (morels) are
disappearing fast from the mountains. The environmental changes have apparently taken a toll on the
traditional earnings of hundreds of people in Himachal, who used to collect and sell guchhi in the
spring season. The news item quotes a local gucchi collector Mr. Chande Ram of Manali that until a
decade back, guchhi used to grow everywhere - in orchards, fields and jungles but it was already
March and there was no sign of guchhi anywhere. He further attributes that the environment is
changing and the disappearing gucchi may be part of that change. The news report says that the
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
spring season last year had also noticed a big decline in guchhi production despite good snowfall and
this year (2013) the traders believe that the decline shall continue as lower area orchards have no
gucchi. The paper has quoted a local gucchi trader Mr Guman Chand who said “Nobody will believe
that I used to collect nearly 50 kg dry guchhi from villagers nearby 15 years back. Last year, I had
collected only 3.5 kg. I am sure it will disappear completely in the next 10 years”.
Ophiocordyceps sinensis
Caterpillar fungus (Ophiocordyceps sinensis) collected from the alpine meadows of the Himalaya is
collected and fetches good prices in Chinese markets. The scenario is such that whole villages (nearly
80 per cent population) except elderly and small children go and stay in the alpine meadows taking
makeshift tents, beddings and food to sustain for nearly three months as soon as the snow starts
melting in March – April in these areas for collection (Negi et al. 2006). Before 1995 there were only a
few collectors and they did not use to get a good price, however, the number of collectors as well as
the harvest kept on increasing till 2007. Members of the families come back on leave from jobs so that
they can contribute to O. sinensis collection due to its higher economic return. A primary collector can
collect about 45 to 55 mummified larvae and fungus in a season. In Munsyari market in Pithoragarh
district in north India alone nearly 90 kg of the produce was sold in 2009. About 300-500 kg of O.
sinensis per annum illegally traded from Dharchula (India) to Nepal and finally to International
market. The sources reveal that the collection is declining gradually after 2007 as the number of
collectors are increasing every year and disturbing the habitat and fragile ecology of the Himalaya.
The state government has put in place a policy for collection of this fungus through local village
cooperative bodies to regulate collection and legalise its trade. About 48000 local employment days
were generated per year in tea shops and restaurants, and transportation of food material to the
collection areas (personal communication by G. C. Pant). This year (2013) on June 16 – 17 cloud
burst and massive landslides not only caused habitat destruction but also loss of life of many
collectors – some were rescued by the army using helicopters.
Collection of O. sinensis in Chipla Kedar, Pithoragargh, India (photos courtesy Dr. A.N. Shukla)
Unsustainable harvesting practices are being followed and this will result in site deterioration.
Overexploitation will lead to vulnerability of the species. As the income from the collection is very
high, people are ignoring traditional practices and long-established agriculture and animal husbandry
are on decline. Social relations are under stress because of competition for collection and money
involved. It is high time that policy interventions are put into practice for sustainable harvesting
looking to the vulnerable status of the species. At present no defined legal protection provisions to the
O. sinensis exist in “Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972,
EXIM policy of India, Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES)”.
The state government has put in place a policy for collection of this fungus through local
village cooperative bodies (Van Panchayats – Forest village bodies)) to regulate collection and legalise
its trade, but illegal trade still continues. Scientific collection and exploration to report the presence of
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
fungus in different parts of the region along with documentation of the occurrence, status of the wild
population and to formulate a strategy for conservation as well as adopting sustainable harvesting
practices are required. To reduce the pressure on some identified areas new areas for collection are to
be opened. Traditional rights of the collectors are to be recognized and community based natural
resource management system is to be put into practice. It is also necessary that people involved in the
collection and trade of the fungus are to be educated about the negative effects of improper collection
and storage practices.
Other fungi
In central India wood decaying fungi (Lenzites acuta, L. vespacea, Microporus xanthopus, Trametes
cingulata, T. elegans, T. lactinea etc.) are being collected from the forests by the local tribes in bulk and
sold at about US$ 20 per kilogram on the international market. From our first report in 1996 (Harsh et
al. 1996) the quantity of these fungi has gradually reduced and overexploitation leading to habitat
destruction can be attributed as the cause. Initially the State Forest Department refused to consider
the collection as Non Wood Forest Produce so no regulations were imposed. Of late the State
Government has taken steps to ban the collection of these fungi from the forest areas. I wonder
whether it is too late?
Basic strategic deficiencies at country level
To conserve and use fungal diversity in a sustainable manner, it is imperative to understand prevailing
policies and legal support for conservation and frame appropriate mechanisms to regulate collection
and trade. Current concerns include:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Failure to link conservation of forest and non-forest natural areas with ecological security of
the country
Poor understanding of issues and concerns of local communities reflected in development
and welfare initiatives
Local communities alienated from environmental issues considering government
interventions as anti-people -- or economics prevail over environment
Poorly controlled legal trade and illegal trafficking pose threat to in situ conservation of
biodiversity
No or poor environment impact assessment of collection methods, cycles and site conditions
will further affect extent and quality of natural areas
The apathy of policy makers and governments in accepting fungi as integral part of
biodiversity resulting into absence of any regulations or ill framed policies
References
FAO 1995. Trade restrictions affecting international trade in non-wood forest products.
Harsh, N.S.K., B.K. Rai & S. S. Ayachi, 1993. Forest fungi and tribal economy – A case study in
Baiga tribe of Madhya Pradesh. Jour. Trop. For. 9: 270-276.
Harsh, N.S.K., C.K. Tiwari & Jamaluddin, 1993. Market potential of wild edible fungi in Madhya
Pradesh. Indian Journal of Tropical Biodiversity 1: 93-98.
Harsh, N.S.K., C.K. Tiwari & B.K. Rai, 1996. Forest fungi in the aid of tribal women of Madhya
Pradesh. Sustainable Forestry 1: 10-15.
Harsh N.S.K., B.K. Rai & V.K. Soni, 1999. Some ethnomycological studies from Madhya Pradesh,
India, p 19-32. In: From ethnomycological to fungal biotechnology: Exploiting fungi from
natural resources for novel products, eds. J.Singh and K.R. Aneja, Plenum Publ. Corpn.
New York. 295 p.
Kumar, Sanjev & Y. P. Sharma 2010. Morel trade in Jammu and Kashmir-Need for organized
commercialisation. Everyman’s Science Vol. XLV (2):111-112.
Negi, C. S., P. R. Koranga & H. S. Ghinga, 2006. Yar tsa gumba (Cordyceps sinensis): A call for its
sustainable exploitation. International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology
13: 1–8.
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First steps in myxomycete conservation activities
Tetyana Krivomaz
Email tankr@i.ua
Myxomycetes an ideal model for building conservation strategy
Slime moulds are eukaryotic, phagotrophic, fungus-like organisms, which living nearly in all
terrestrial ecosystems. In previous systems slime molds include several groups: Myxomycetes -“true
slime moulds”, Protosteliomycetes – microscopic relatives of Myxomycetes, Dictyosteliomycetes –soil
inhabitants, Copromyxida – animal dung inhabitants, Acrasida – with individual independent cells that
can act as one organism, Plasmodiophoromycota – cell parasitic species. All this groups have a
plasmodial stage in their life cycle. Modern systems recognize only Dictyosteliomycetes,
Protosteliomycetes and Myxomycetes (Adl et al., 2012). Copromyxida belong to the same phylogenic
branch as Amoebozoa. No close relatives are known for Acrasida and Plasmodiophoromycota. The
conservation strategy model begins with Myxomycetes, characterized by a remarkable transformation
from an animal-like to a fungus-like form. These organisms develop very rapidly, have a high
reproductive potential, and seem to possess effective dispersal mechanisms. Myxomycetes tend to be
rather inconspicuous. Most parts of the myxomycete life cycle exist as vegetative stages, mobile freeliving plasmodia that typically thrive in cool and shady moist places. They feed on bacteria, protozoa,
yeast cells, fungi, organic remains etc. After a period of feeding and growth, fruiting bodies develop in
drier and more exposed locations. Most are relatively ephemeral. They contain numerous spores
which can be dispersed by wind and will eventually germinate and develop into a plasmodium under
suitable conditions. Myxomycetes spend a portion of their life cycle in a state where their very
presence in a given habitat can be exceedingly difficult if not impossible to determine. Their
inconspicuous nature and complex life history strategy provide an immense challenge in biodiversity
assessments, so have often been neglected. This has far-reaching consequences for estimates of the
number of species and their conservation. There is convincing evidence that we know only about 20%
of the actual diversity in many protist groups. Considering the dramatic losses of habitats, a large
portion of the Earth’s biodiversity will disappear before it has been discovered (Foissner &
Hawksworth, 2008).
Problems of evaluation of myxomycete distribution
Myxomycetes are found in nearly all terrestrial ecosystems worldwide from Antarctica to desert.
Approximately 30% of the species are cosmopolitan. The highest diversity is in the temperate climatic
zone of the northern hemisphere, where moisture and decaying organic matter are available.
Myxomycetes are associated with a number of different microhabitats. These include remains of
woody origin, fallen logs, the bark surface of living trees, forest floor litter, the dung of herbivorous
animals, and herbaceous plants. Myxomycetes are fundamentally terrestrial organisms and they have
a significant impact on the species diversity of soil microorganisms. Study of rDNA from soil shows
that myxomycetes (including protostelids and dictyostelids) are a dominant group of protists in this
habitat (Stephenson et al., 2000). Temperature and humidity are the main factors limiting
myxomycete distribution and abundance in nature. Climate, altitude and plant type also represent an
important factors influencing the occurrence of myxomycetes. Species richness tends to increase with
more diversity and biomass of the vascular plants providing various types of detritus that support the
bacteria and other microorganisms needed to feed myxomycetes. The pH of the substrates may also
represent an important factor influencing the distribution of these organisms, although many
myxomycetes appear to have a relatively wide pH tolerance (Wrigley de Basanta, 2000).
Myxomycetes have a cosmopolitan distribution due to a presumed easy dispersal by wind and water.
Feeding by invertebrates may also help to spread spores. These properties allow them to exploit
successfully habitat islands occurring both temporally and spatially in nature.
A distribution map presents only the fruiting body stage of myxomycetes. It is certainly
possible that there are habitats where myxomycetes live as amoebal and plasmodial populations only
35
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
and do not fruit. Approximately 50% of all described species of myxomycetes are known only from
the type locality or fewer than five localities worldwide. It seems likely that many of these “species”
are no more than morphologically distinct biotypes present in particular habitats or confined to a
certain regions of the world (Stephenson et al., 2000). A number of the more common and
widespread morphospecies actually consist of complexes of geographically restricted apomictic clonal
lines (Clark, 2004). These genetically isolated lines are capable of independent evolution, which can
lead to the accumulation of minor morphological differences that reflect specific adaptations to the
particular set of environmental conditions in which they occur. Direct environmental sampling with
the use of molecular techniques such as DNA probes would represent a way of detecting hidden
amoebal and\or plasmodial populations of myxomycetes, which would be regarded as “sink”
populations in terms of dispersal capacities (Foissner & Hawksworth, 2008).
Threatens for myxomycetes
Myxomycetes have not yet been sufficiently evaluated for conservation status, but at least some are
undoubtedly threatened by climate change, disturbance, habitat destruction and pollution. A
particular habitat within which a species of myxomycetes has been established may persist for only a
short period of time. The species always survives by reestablishing itself in some new habitat, which
may be the same location if conditions once again become favorable. In unfavourable conditions
spores may be covered by proteoglycans and create cysts. Plasmodia also can transfer to the survival
stage scletotium. Urban pressure can change native biota of myxomycetes, because in town
introduced species often appear. Parks and gardens can harbour more biodiversity of myxomycetes
than in native ecosystems of the same regions. Acid rain reduces species diversity from the order
Physarales as result of leaching lime from the soil, which need for normal morphogenesis. In general,
members of the Stemonitales develop under more acidic conditions than do members of the Physarales
and the Trichiales (Stephenson et al., 2000). Climate change has an especially important effect on
nivicolous myxomycetes, occurring at the edge of melting snow at high altitude.
Conservation activities
The IUCN Specialist Group promoting Conservation of Myxomycetes is beginning to prepare a
foundation on which future conservation policy for Myxomycetes can be developed.
UK
First steps for conservation of myxomycetes was the creation of a myxomycete reserve by Bruce Ing
in Wales near the town of Mold, in a small town park in agreement with the Forestry Commission. In
this place native ash and hazel grow on calcareous soils with introduced poplars and maples.
Protection actions are the termination of clearing of dead wood and leaves, which are favorable
substratum for myxomycetes.
Russia
1) In 2005 Yuri Novozhilov proposed to include 21 endangered species of myxomycetes in the Red
Book of Nature of Leningradskaya oblast in Russia: Colloderma oculatum, Comatricha longa, Cribraria
purpurea, Diachea splendens, Diderma floriforme, D. niveum, D. trevelyani, Didymium serpula, Lepidoderma
carestianum, L. tigrinum, Enteridium splendens, Lindbladia tubulina, Physarum alpinum, Ph. auriscalpium,
Ph. flavidum, Ph. globuliferum, Ph. listeria, Stemonitis splendens, Hemitrichia serpula, Metatrichia floriformis,
Trichia alpina.
2) In 2007 Alexander Lebedev recommended including in the Red Book of Tver’ oblast 10 species of
rare myxomycetes: Arcyria glauca, A. minuta, Brefeldia maxima, Colloderma oculatum, Diderma fallax,
Didymium iridis, Hemitrichia intorta, Lycogala conicum, Physarum famintzinii, Ph. oblatum.
Ukraine
1) Preliminary analyses of threat were made for 278 species of myxomycetes in Ukraine. Species
considered as endangered included 12 myxomycetes species, with 22 mainly nivicolous species being
assessed as vulnerable (Kryvomaz, personal data).
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Cribraria purpurea – endangered species in Ukraine and in Leningradskaya oblast of Russia. Image © Alain Michaud
Potentially endangered myxomycetes in Ukraine are: Barbeyella minutissima, Colloderma oculatum,
Cribraria ferruginea, C. mirabilis, C. purpurea, Diderma chondrioderma, Elaeomyxa cerifera, Lamproderma
columbinum, Lepidoderma tigrinum, Licea pusilla, Physarum tenerum and Trichia subfusсa.
Potentially vulnerable myxomycetes in Ukraine are: Diderma alpinum, D. meyerae, D. niveum,
Didymium dubium, Lamproderma aeneum, L. carestiae, L. cristatum, L. cucumer, L. echinosporum, L.
ovoideoechinulatum, L. ovoideum, L. pulveratum, L. retirugisporum, L. splendens, L. zonatum, Lepidoderma
alpestroides, L. carestianum, L. chailletii, Physarum albescens, Ph. alpestre, Ph. vernum and Trichia alpina.
Also in Ukraine 34 species of
myxomycetes were identified, which
are rare not only in Ukraine, but in
the world as well. This is likely to be
the result of general data deficiency.
They
include
Arcyria
globosa,
Badhamia melanospora, Clastoderma
debarianum, Comatricha ellae, C.
longipila, Cribraria macrocarpa, C.
splendens, Diderma chondrioderma, D.
cingulatum, D. montanum, Didymium
sturgisii,
Echinostelium
apitectum,
Fuligo muscorum, Hemitrichia intorta,
Lepidoderma
tigrinum,
Licea
inconspiqua, L. tenera, Oligonema
flavidum, Perichaena pedata, Physarum
Lamproderma ovoideum – a very common nivicolous species in European Alps,
citrinum,
Ph.
confertum,
Ph.
but presumably vulnerable in Ukrainian Carpathians; can be affected by
conglomeratum,
Ph.
decipiens,
Ph.
climate change on a global level. Image © Alain Michaud
digitatum,
Ph.
gyrosum,
Ph.
37
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
licheniforme, Ph. murinum, Ph. notabile, Ph. oblatum, Stemonaria longa, Stemonitopsis amoena, S. gracilis,
Trichia alpina and T. lutescens.
2) Detail evaluations were made for the biggest genus of myxomycetes, Physarum. A total of 40
Physarum species have been recorded in Ukraine. Only three species – Ph. album, Ph. cinereum and Ph.
cinereum are certainly not threatened, widely distributed and found in the whole of Ukraine. Six
species: Ph. bivalve, Ph. leucopus, Ph. compressum, Ph. contextum, Ph. globuliferum and Ph. psittacinum are
not threatened also, and are at least fairly common in Ukraine. Seven species – Ph. flavicomum, Ph.
leucophaeum, Ph. citrinum, Ph. decipiens, Ph. gyrosum, Ph. mutabile and Ph. pulcherripes are probably not
threatened, as they are recorded from several Ukrainian regions. But 60% (24 species) of the genus
was found once or only several times from a limited number of Ukrainian regions. From this big
group Ph. albescens, Ph. alpestre and Ph. vernum need to be emphasized, which are nivicolous species
and are proposed to be plaved in the endangered category, due to the threat from climate change. Ph.
lakhanpalii is usually found in tropics but in Ukraine was discovered in the mediterranean climate of
Crimea. Some species from this big group – Ph. bitectum, Ph. didermoides, Ph. pusillum and Ph. virescens
are rare not only for Ukraine. Ph. licheniforme and Ph. digitatum that were collected in strongly
threatened habitat types in the vicinity of megapolises near Lviv and Kyiv (Dudka et al., 2011).
Physarum psittacinum – a fairly common and beautiful species. Image © Alain Michaud
3) Irina Dudka is preparing a proposal for the next edition of Red Book of Ukraine (Dudka, personal
data) to include Oligonema aurantium. This species is very rare in Ukraine and was found only once in
Desnans'ko-Staroguts'kiy National Nature Park (Dudka & Krivomaz, 2005). From Europe it is
known from only two records: the first one in Netherlands (locus classicus) and the second one in
Great Britain. Criteria for inclusion in the next edition of the Red Book of Ukraine include:
• species that only occur in threatened habitats
• species that are described as new for science from Ukraine and are unknown in other
countries or species with very limited world area
• species are characterized with macroscopic features allowing field recognition
38
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Germany
Martin Schnittler (Schnittler, personal data) placed 413 myxomycetes species from Germany into
nine conservation categories:
1. very common: on most local species lists, regularly to be found when checking the
microhabitat;
2. common: usually to be found during systematic surveys of the respective microhabitat;
3. fairly common: occasionally found, but well over 100 records from Germany known;
4. rare: but more than 20 records;
5. very rare: less than 20 records known;
6. extremely rare: less than 5 records known from Germany;
7. extinct or presumably extinct: not recorded since more than 40 years;
8. data deficient: no assessment possible;
9. not estimated:
Species only recorded in cultures or those found occasionally in microhabitats which have not yet
been systematically investigated, will be assessed as data deficient. Notoriously confused species will
be assessed in this category as well.
Global-level assessment
1) For nivicolous myxomycetes emphasize threats by climate change. Tentative evaluations of
conservation status for ten nivicolous species were made: Diacheopsis metallica, Diderma alpinum,
Didymium dubium, Lamproderma echinosporum, L. ovoideum, Lepidoderma carestianum, L. chailletii,
Physarum albescens, Ph. vernum, Trichia alpina (Kryvomaz et al., 2010). The strong association between
nivicolous myxomycetes and melting snow patches suggests that their distribution is likely to be
strongly and negatively affected by global warming as winter snow cover diminishes.
2) The first myxomycete Diacheopsis metallica was published in Red List Species on the Edge of
Survival (Species on the Edge of Survival, 2011).
3) Evaluation of conservation status for 10 species of order Trichiales: Arcyria denudata, A. minuta, A.
stipata, Calomyxa metalica, Hemitrichia clavata, Metatrichia vesparium, Perichaena chrysosperma, Trichia
decipiens, T. scabra, T. varia (Kryvomaz et al., 2012). Information base include specimens, databases,
bibliographic sources and field observations. Using the program “Geocat” (geocat.kew.org) estimates
were made of extent of occurrence and occupancy. For each species population trend and threats
were analyzed, and evaluation using IUCN criteria took place.
References
Adl, S.M., Simpson, A.G.B., Lane, C.E. et al. (2012). The revised classification of eucaryotes. Journal
of Eukaryotic Microbiology 59(5): 429-514.
Clark, J. (2004) Reproductive systems and taxonomy in the myxomycetes. Syst. Geogr. Plants. 74:
209–216.
Dudka, I.O., Krivomaz, T.I. (2005). Myxomycetes of Desnans'ko-Staroguts'kiy National nature
park. Chernigivs'kiy Univercity Scientist Journal 260: 111-117 [in Ukrainian].
Dudka, I.O., Krivomaz, T.I., Leontyev, D.V. (2011). Conservation aspects of some rare species from
genus Physarum (Myxomycetes) in Ukraine. Proc. «16th Congress of the European Mycologists»:
68–69.
Foissner, W., Hawksworth, D. (2009). Protist Diversity and Geographical Distribution. Biodiversity
and Conservation 17 (2) 2008: 211 p.
Krivomaz, T.I., Michaud, A. & Minter, D.W. (2010). Nivicolous Myxomycetes IMI Descriptions of
Fungi and Bacteria Set 184 (No. 1831–1840).
Krivomaz, T.I., Michaud, A. & Minter, D.W. (2012). IMI Description Sheets of Fungi and Bacteria Set
192 (No. 1911-1920).
Stephenson, S.L. Novozhilov, Yu.K., Schnittler, M. (2000). Distribution and ecology of
myxomycetes in high-latitude regions of the northern hemisphere. J. Biogeogr. 4: 741–754.
Wrigley de Basanta, D. (2004). The effect of simulated acid rain on corticolous myxomycetes. Syst.
Geogr. Pl. 74: 175–181.
39
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Conservation of Tricholoma species in Turkey
İsmail Şen & Hakan Alli
Muğla Sıtkı Koçman University, Science Faculty, Biology Department, Kötekli, Muğla, Turkey.
Email frapesle@gmail.com
The genus Tricholoma is one of the classic genera of the Agaricales. Nearly a thousand Tricholoma taxa
have been recorded from different places of the world, although the identity of perhaps the majority of
these names remains uncertain. In the field, Tricholoma species can be easily recognized. They have
fleshy, fibrous fruiting bodies with a smooth to suede-like, fibrillose or scaly cap and emarginate
lamella (Singer 1986; Shanks, 1997; Knudsen and Vesterhold, 2008; Kibby, 2010). Species
identification can be difficult as many species appear similar.
All species of Tricholoma are assumed to be mycorrhizal with coniferous trees and shrubs
(Singer, 1986; Shanks, 1997; Knudsen & Vesterhold, 2012). Additonally, Kibby (2010) reported that
some Tricholoma have been recorded with Helianthemum and Dryas. It seems that this genus is very
important for forest ecosystems.
IUCN status and biodiversity of Tricholoma in Turkey
In Turkey, 68 taxa of the members of the genus Tricholoma have been reported (Solak et al. 2007),
though 16 of these names are not current according to Index Fungorum. Among these taxa, Tricholoma
anatolicum has a special significance for the Turkish macrofungus biota (Figure 1), and was originally
described from our country (Intini et al. 2003).
Figure 1. Tricholoma anatolicum (photographed by H. Alli)
40
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Tricholoma anatolicum belongs to the “matsutake” group of Tricholoma. This fungus occurs only in
sandy soil of Cedrus libani forests. While these forests are primarily distributed in the Taurus mountain
range located in the Mediterranean region, they also occur in limited areas in the Middle Black Sea
Region (Çatalan-Erbaa and Akıncıköy-Niksar) and Sultandağı-Afyon (Odabaşı, 1990; Akkemik,
2003). T. anatolicum has been observed at eleven localities (Doğan & Akata, 2011). The fruiting
periods is a limited time from October to November (Doğan & Akata, 2011). T. anatolicum is a good
edible species due to its special aroma and taste (Intini et al., 2003), so it has economic value and is
collected by local people. It is also exported, particularly to Japan. We do not have accurate figures
for the quantity collected, but Doğan & Akata (2011) reported that more than 50 tonnes of T.
anatolicum may be exported depending on climatic conditions. Collectors may dig the top layer and
expose the immature fruiting bodies, and there is no collection legislation. Due to these threats, the
species should be monitored and protected to ensure its sustainability. Tricholoma caligatum and T.
terreum are also collected for food (Figure 2). While, T. terreum is a widespread species in Turkey,
Tricholoma caligatum is not so frequently encountered and therefore should also be monitored.
Figure 2. Tricholoma caligatum (photographed by H. Alli)
Assessments of the IUCN category of some Tricholoma species of Turkey have been published
recently. Tricholoma sulphureum is considered to belong in the Critically Endangered category.
Similarly, T. equestre, T. sejunctum, T. stans and T. ustaloides are considered to be Vulnurable. In
Europe, T. colossus is reported as a threatened species (Dahlberg & Croneborg, 2006). It is recorded
from 21 countries and included in the Red List of 13 nations. This species has been recorded from
Turkey in 5 localities (Solak et al., 2007), but it has not been assessed for Red List status. In Turkey,
the IUCN category of all Tricholoma species should be determined by further studies and the species
which are threatened should be monitored and protected.
41
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
References
Akkemik Ü (2003). Tree rings of Cedrus libani at the northern boundary of its natural distribution.
IAWA Journal, 24 (1): 63-73.
Dahlberg A, Croneborg H (2006). The 33 threatened fungi in Europe. Nature and Environment, No. 136.
Belgium, Council of Europe Publishing.
Doğan H.H, Akata I (2011). Ecological features of Tricholoma anatolicum in Turkey. Afr. J. Biotechnol.
10 (59): 12626 – 12638.
Intini M, Doğan HH, Riva A (2003). Tricholoma anatolicum Spec. Nov.: A new member of the
matsutake group. Micol. e Veget. Medit. 18(2): 135-142.
Kibby, G. (2010) The genus Tricholoma in Britain. Field Mycology, 11(4): 113-140.
Knudsen H, Vesterholt J (2008). Funga Nordica, agaricoid, boletoid and cyphelloid genera. Copenhagen,
Nordsvamp.
Odabaşı T (1990). Lübnan sediri (Cedrus libani Loud.)’nin kozalak ve tohumu üzerine araştırmalar
(Researches Sur les Graines et les cônes de Cédre du Liban). Ankara: Orman Genel Müdürlüğü Yayını.
Singer, R. (1986) The Agaricales in modern taxonomy, Chicago: Koeltz Scientific Books
Shanks, K.M. (1997) The Agaricales (gilled fungi) of California, Tricholomataceae II., California, Mad
River Press.
Solak, M.H., Işıloğlu, M., Kalmış, E., All, H. (2007). Macrofungi of Turkey, Checklist. Vol.1. İzmir,
Genc Universiteliler Ofset.
Fungi and the Action Plan for the Conservation of Biodiversity: what
happens in Tuscany (Italy)?
Claudia Perini, Maria D’Aguanno & Elena Salerni
BIOCONNET, BIOdiversity and CONservation NETwork, Department of Life Sciences - University
of Siena, via Mattioli 4, 53100 Siena, Italy. Email: claudia.perini@unisi.it
Fungi are well-known for their gastronomic value. They are also often accused of having a negative
impact on the environment. Our group has attempted to emphasize the importance of fungi as keyplayers in biological processes to a wider audience and to make different communities, from the
scientific world to governmental bodies, aware of the need to include them in nature conservation
activities.
Thanks to the Important Plant Areas (IPAs) programme, a target of the two European Plant
Conservation Strategies (2002–2007 and 2008–2014), fungi - treated at the same level as plants - were
included among the actors. In fact the Planta Europa network and the Council of Europe allows for
non EU states to consider habitats and organism groups not listed in the Habitats Directive and
Natura 2000 programme for conservation action plans. To recognize an IPA good information on
distribution, ecology and threat status is needed to meet the three criteria: threat, richness and habitat
distinctiveness (Perini et al., 2011).
In Tuscany the first attempts to describe key sites containing rare and or threatened fungal species
and/or because of high fungal diversity dates back to the first years of the new millennium.
Participation in the Italian IPA project and the publication of a Tuscan Red List has been
fundamental. Further attempts to emphasize the value of habitats for their larger fungi have been
made and finally fungi are included in the action plan for the conservation of biodiversity at least at
regional level. There is a prospect that this regional approach will be translated to a national leve. The
42
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
methods applied and some examples of mycological key-sites or AFP (Animals, Fungi and Plants)
target species for some habitat types that need conservation, are reported.
Tuscany covers a high variety of environments from the Tyrrhenian coast through a hilly landscape
up to the mountains, and covers nearly 23.000 km2. It is more or less similar in size to Macedonia and
half the area of The Netherlands or Switzerland, that have databases with checklists, redlists and/or
important fungi areas.
The data on epigeous larger fungi were the results of surveys by the University of Siena, field
excursions with amateurs and last but not least of the collaborative mapping project of the Tuscan
Region between 1995-2005.
An important factor in designation key areas is the presence of threatened fungi. The lack of a list
of fungal species that are known to be globally or “regionally” threatened or endemic (with the
exception of Pleurotus nebrodensis) and the lack of their presence in the appendix of the Habitats
Directive, brought us to look first at the 33 fungal species proposed for Appendix 1 of the Bern
Convention (Dahlberg & Croneborg, 2006) and to the Candidates for a European Red List
(www.wsl.ch/eccf), and investigate suspected threatened species restricted to the Mediterranean
Biogeographical Zone. For the national project on important plant areas 42 fungal species, proposed
by Italian mycologists, were included. These were 26 species proposed for the Appendix of the Bern
Convention and present in Italy, 15 species that were assessed in the Italian Checklist as rare or
threatened and Pleurotus nebrodensis, a near-endemic of Sicily (Perini et al., 2011).
Stimulated by the relatively few initiatives that describe key-areas for fungi (Perini et al., 2011), a first
draft for Tuscany was presented at the EMA congress in Yalta 2003, comparing the methods adopted
in the UK with the ones proposed by Planta Europa (Perini & Laganà, 2003). In the following years
other contributions were discussed during different meetings evaluating habitats from a mycological
point of view ((Parmasto et al., 2004; Perini & Laganà, 2003; Perini & Salerni, 2004). This experience
at a local level was enforced by the participation of mycologists in the national IPA project and, going
from the Alps in the north to Sicily in the south, eight areas were highlighted to be important for fungi
(Blasi et al. 2009, 2010; Venturella et al. 2011). In this way various habitats in Tuscany have been
evaluated for conservation actions not only because the fauna and/or flora was interesting but also
because of the presence of important, rare and/or threatened larger fungi and/or of a high fungal
diversity, and were described in the Tuscan Biodiversity Action Plan.
A transnational approach does not necessarily translate well to a regional level. For example,
mires are well-known habitats needing protection and are listed in the EC project “Natura 2000”. In
the Apennines of northern Tuscany, montane mires are few and occupy only a very small area and
were identified as sites of community importance and designated as Special areas of Conservation
(SAC). The value of this habitats has been underlined by the presence of an interesting fungal
diversity. Some species redlisted in other countries were found for the first time (e.g. Entoloma
poliopus, Gymnopilus bellulus, Hygrocybe laeta, Inocybe acutella, Omphalina oniscus). Entoloma cuspidiferum
and Galerina paludosa are strictly linked to Sphagnum communities, and Arrhenia lobata and Rickenella
mellea are arctic-alpine species and therefore at the southern limit of their distribution (Perini et al.,
2002).
Another example can be seen in the Nature Reserve ‘‘Bosco di Sant’Agnese’’ which is dominated
by evergreen Mediterranean woodlands and scrublands, especially by native Cupressus sempervirens
that covers an extensive area. This reserve has an important fungal diversity with three fungal species
described new for science, various listed for the first time at national or regional level, and
Sarcosphaera crassa, one of the proposed species for the Bern convention, present with in various
localities. This species was described by Giorgio Santi in 1789 on the Mount Amiata (central
Tuscany), in the so-called “Bosco della Trinità”. We found this ascomycete in the 1990s in the nearby
Natural Reserve “Pigelleto”, but today the only locality in Tuscany where it is still present is the S.
Agnese wood (Pecoraro et al., 2006).
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
The “Montagnola Senese” is a Site of Community Importance because of Habitats, Plants and
Animals (Habitats Directive 92/43/EEC). Here during more than 40 years of mycological surveys
over 500 larger epigeous fungi were observed and 60 species have great conservation value because of
their threat status. Two are included in the list of fungi proposed for the Bern Convention Appendix
and listed among the European candidates as vulnerable in the Mediterranean zone (Croatia): Boletus
dupainii and Leucopaxillus compactus. The first taxon was assessed at national level and reported as
“vulnerable” (VU) and in Tuscany classified as “endangered” (EN) (Perini et al., 2011).
So step by step other areas were analyzed and results communicated, but this is not sufficient! Fungi
are still not properly represented. In conclusion we hope that our experiences in developing the
Tuscan Biodiversity action plan and at the Tuscan Council for Biodiversity will demonstrate a new
way to communicate the importance of fungi, and encourage others to include fungi in conservation
and managment programmes.
References
Antonini D., Antonini M. (Eds.), 2006. Libro rosso dei Macromiceti della Toscana. Dal censimento
alla Red list. ARSIA Regione Toscana, Firenze, 344pp (plus CD).
Blasi C., Marignani M., Copiz R., Fipaldini M. (Eds.), 2009. A Thematic contribution to the
National Biodiversity Strategy: Mapping the Important Plant Areas in Italy. Palombi e Partner
S.r.l.: 33pp (plus CD).
Blasi C., Marignani M., Copiz R., Fipaldini M., Del Vico E. (Eds.), 2010. Le aree importanti per le
piante nelle Regioni d’Italia: il presente e il futuro della conservazione del nostro patrimonio
botanico. Progetto Artiser, Roma, 224pp.
Dahlberg A., Croneborg H. (eds) 2006. The 33 threatened fungi in Europe. Complementary and
revised information on candidates for listing in Appendix 1 of the Bern Convention. Nature and
Environment 136, 131pp.
Parmasto E., Perini C., Tiina Rahko, 2004 – Attempts to introduce fungi in nature conservation
activities. Abstracts book of “4th European Conference on the Conservation of Wild Plants”,
September
2004:
7
(Lecture).
Valencia
17-20
http://www.nerium.net/plantaeuropa/Download/Workshops/Workshop_1/Parmasto_%20Peri
ni_%20Rahko_w1.pdf
Pecoraro L., Salerni E., Frignani F., Perini C., 2006 - Sarcosphaera crassa (Santi ex Steudel) Pouzar:
specie da proteggere a livello europeo. 101° Congresso Nazionale Società Botanica Italiana,
Caserta 27-29 Settembre 2006: 252.
Perini C., Bonini I., Romagnoli P., Antonini D., Antonini M., 2002 - Macrofungi and bryophytes of
montane mires (Tuscany, Italy): organisms worthy of conservation. Feddes Repertorium 113 (12):152-160.
Perini C., Laganà A., 2003 – Towards selection of IFA (Important fungus areas): the italian
experience. Abstracts: XIV congress of European Mycologists, Yalta, Ukraine, 22-27 September
2003: 35
Perini C., Salerni E., 2004 – Identificazione di aree particolarmente importanti per la conservazione
dei funghi. 99° Congresso della Società Botanica Italiana, Torino 22-24 settembre 2004: 175.
Perini C, Leonardi P, Pecoraro L, Salerni E., 2011 - The Important Plant Areas program from a
mycological point of view: the regional experience in an European context. Fitosociologia 48 (2)
suppl. 1: 155-161.
Venturella G., Altobelli E., Bernicchia A., Di Piazza S., Donnini D., Gargano M.L., Gorjón S.P.,
Granito V.M., Lantieri A., Lunghini D., Montemartini A., Padovan F., Pavarino M., Pecoraro L.,
Perini C., Rana G., Ripa C., Salerni E., Savino E., Tomei P.E., A. Vizzini A., Zambonelli A.,
Zotti M., 2011. Fungal biodiversity and in situ conservation in Italy. Plant Biosystems 145(4): 950-957.
10.1080/11263504.2011.633115
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Ex situ conservation of fungi from forests of India – a national type
culture collection
N.S.K. Harsh
Forest Pathology Division, Forest Research Institute, Indian Council of Forestry Research &
Education, P. O. New Forest, Dehradun-248006, India. Email: nirmalharsh57@gmail.com
Fungi are important biotechnological tools to meet the requirements of food and medicine of growing
populations. Due to over exploitation, human disturbances and/or natural calamities many of these
organisms are being lost every day and need to be preserved in the laboratories in ex-situ culture
collections. The World Data Centre for Microorganisms (WDCM) and The World Federation of
Culture Collections offer searchable indices of over 400 registered culture collections in more than 50
countries worldwide. Many culture collection homepages can also be found through the WDCM.
The Forest Pathology Division of Forest Research Institute, Dehradun, India houses the National
Type Culture Collection (NTCC) of wood rotting fungi and forest pathogens. The rich collection
currently has 988 fungal cultures belonging to 140 genera and 298 species of relevance for forest
ecosystems. A few cultures have been received from other international culture collections. The oldest
culture of 1939 is of a Stereum sp. (No. 220/S) isolated from a pole of sal (Shorea robusta) wood
collected from FRI campus, Dehradun.
A reference card is made for each culture bearing the NTCC number, name of the fungus,
name of the host, date of collection, etc. The cards also contain information about the substrate from
where cultures were isolated, suffixing ‘S’ indicates culture obtained from sporophore (fruit body), ‘C’
indicates culture obtained from context of the sporophore and ‘R’ indicates culture obtained from the
rotted wood. The cultures are maintained in a wooden incubator at 8o±1oC on PDA medium culture
tubes and sub-culturing of these fungi is done every 2 – 3 months. A duplicate set of cultures is
maintained in mineral oil (liquid paraffin) at 15o±1oC. The cultures are checked regularly for
contamination during initial growth. There are more than one culture for some species.
Wood rotting white-rot fungi belonging to Basidiomycota constitute the major portion of the
cultures in NTCC (443 in number), distributed among 57 genera and 115 species. Some of the species
of white-rot fungi have immense value in biotechnology such as bioremediation, enzyme (laccase,
cellulases, xylanase) production, biodeinking, biopulping and medicinal uses. Brown-rot fungi
comprise 148 cultures, distributed among 21 genera and 32 species. Some of the species of this group
have potential for bioremediation and source of enzymes (Cellulases, xylanases).
There are 36 fungsal cultures present in the NTCC of species that have established nutritional
and pharmaceutical values. One of them, Ganoderma lucidum is considered as the ‘King of the herbs’
and its nutriceuticals are given to patients with more than 20 different maladies including migraine
and headache, hypertension, arthritis, bronchitis, asthma, gastritis, hypercholesterolaemia, hepatitis,
cardiovascular problems and cancer including leukaemia. Another important fungus in NTCC is the
wonder caterpillar-fungus Ophiocordyceps sinensis (= Cordyceps sinensis) which is found in the alpine
meadows of the Himalaya. It is known for performance enhancement and as a longevity booster.
Echinodontium tinctorium which infects the living trees of Taxus baccata is reported to have anticancer
properties. Phellinus linteus, known as phansomba in Maharshtra (western India) is known to contain
anticancer drugs.
The Biodiversity Convention (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1992) has created an awareness of the
importance of biodiversity and also initiated promulgation of laws for the protection of biodiversity
resources. There is one more aspect which needs immediate attention, to raise cultures of as many
microorganisms as possible and preserve them for screening for human welfare. In this light, the
fungal cultures of NTCC are invaluable resource of national and international importance.
45
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Myco-entanglement - public perceptions of fungi in biodiversity
conservation
Alison Pouliot
Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200,
Australia. Email alison.pouliot@anu.edu.au
At a very young age, I was fortunate to stumble into the world of some very inspired individuals,
otherwise known as field naturalists. Their influence expanded my imagination through the discovery of
invertebrates, bryophytes, intertidal creatures, fossilised forms, things with wings and spines and scales...
but most impressively, fungi.
Mycena interrupta changed my world. That a life so tiny, so blue, so exquisite, so unseen could exist,
affected me in a way that I only came to fully understand much later in retrospect.
Image 1: The tiny exquisite form of Mycena interrupta
Image 2: Golden jelly bells
There were also golden jelly bells on logs. And perfect pink parasols. Unseen birds that laid miniscule
eggs in satellite-dish nests.
Image 3: Perfect pink parasols.
Image 4: Eggs of unseen birds in satellite-dish nests.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Sticks that appeared to grow caterpillars. Spaceships that landed all around me when I wasn't looking.
Image 5: Sticks that appeared to grow caterpillars.
Image 6: Random spaceships.
And an ear that cried sad red tears.
Image 7: A crying ear.
But the jewel in the crown only revealed itself once the sun had slipped over the horizon. When the
sounds of furtive nocturnal creatures intensified my curiosity. It was the eerie green glow of the
47
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
bioluminescent, Omphalotus nidiformis that truly enchanted my world, infecting me with a life-long
fungal passion.
All of this was a revelation of the incredible diversity of life that continues to become more
extraordinary every day. However, as I grew older, it also, became more troubling. How on earth were
we to look after them all?
Each autumn I conduct various fungal ecology forays to introduce Homo sapiens to fungi. But with each
year that passes, my field sites, diminish. This year, some of them looked like this.
Image 8: These once-rich fungal habitats have since been ravaged by the impacts of fire, deep-rooted vegetation removal, grazing
and cropping.
These sites were once all rich in fungi.
Fungal conservation, conservation of all biodiversity, becomes an ever-greater challenge. Congresses
such as this provide a vital means to address such challenges.
Many of the presenters at this conference have focussed, unsurprisingly, on fungi. I'd like to diverge
slightly and talk about human-fungal relationships. In particular, about some research I've been doing
into perceptions of fungi in Australia and Europe and how understanding such perceptions might feed
into conservation. I also ask how we might more effectively communicate the aspirations of mycologists
and fungal conservationists to broader audiences, to raise the profile of fungi.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
I don't doubt for a moment that all of us here appreciate the astonishing beauty, complexity and
importance of fungi. However, effective fungal conservation requires us to not only convey this more
widely, but also to inspire action. We might begin by asking whether this is really a job for mycologists.
Or do we need to engage the skills of others to help re-imagine fungi, to ensure the survival of fungal
diversity as we negotiate urgent issues of habitat and species loss?
Taxonomy underpins fungal conservation. New technologies such as DNA barcoding are incredibly
powerful tools that have catalysed our understanding of relationships and accelerated taxonomy.
Molecular techniques are revealing the staggering depths and complexities of the fungal kingdom. But
they have also taken many of us out of the field, where connections are made, sensorial engagements,
other ways of knowing fungi, ways that inspire caring. Meanwhile, genes and genomes may become
even more obscure for those who are less scientifically literate. Do we need to consider how this
advancement in scientific technology, despite all the obvious benefits, affects public capacity to
effectively contribute to the conservation of fungi?
There's been much discussion of the challenges to mycology and fungal conservation that typically
revolve around deficiencies – of mycologists, funds, species knowledge, public recognition, political
interest, and so forth. These issues were all identified at the Whitby meeting and were common to most
countries. It seems from the country reports presented at this congress that all still exist in most. All
relate to the need to raise the profile of fungi. But perhaps less commonly considered is how we might
translate the invisibility or imperceptibility of fungi. Many fungal conservation issues hinge on abstract
scenarios based largely on invisible, far-away factors. That is, we're essentially asking people to conserve
something they mostly can't see, are removed from, and often poorly understand. Most of the time,
many people can only respond from second-hand, relayed, non-experiencei. Moreover, there is often
little recognition of how fungi have any connection with our own well-being and survival. This is further
compounded by a long history of negative association and poor press, at least in the Anglophone world.
How can we realistically expect people to adopt conservation-oriented perspectives let alone any notion
of fungal empathy? In situ sensorial experience, actually connecting with fungi is perhaps the most
obvious way, although such opportunities are not available to everyone. The use of allegory, metaphor
and synecdoche to elucidate the less visible or more abstract concepts of the fungal kingdom could also
be a useful starting point. There is a long history of the use of such tropes as an integral part of
illustrating other scientific concepts.ii
Another challenge is that of scale, both temporal and spatial. How do we shift from the local, to imagine
global issues in the context of fungi and the various processes and threats that compromise their
existence? While many scientists move fairly easily between spatial and temporal scales, we can't
assume this to be a skill common to the wider community. It seems the way fungal conservation issues
have been portrayed is that they're often too abstract, on abstruse scales, and have little direct obvious
relevance to people's lives. Various researchers have shown that many people don't have the necessary
environmental conceptual structures to comprehend the complexities or urgency of environmental
issues. For example, cognitive linguist George Lakoff discusses the necessity of frames or schemas that
allow us to understand both the nature of climate change and how we might respondiii. Many parallel
challenges relating to imperceptibility, scale, function and process also exist in issues of conserving
fungi. While many fungal conservation issues may be ecological and environmental, they require sociopolitical solutions that are likely to require a cultural and political reorientation.
In my own fungal conservation research, I've decided to focus on the links between Homo sapiens and
fungi. I've begun by trying to get an impression of how fungi have been portrayed historically in the
press. To date I've assessed an extensive archive of Australian newspaper articles dating back over a
century and have begun looking at British & Swiss press archives to provide some kind of European
comparison.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
At times, one might be lead to believe that fungi intentionally go out of their way to wage their own war
against humanity as suggested by these article titles from Australian newspapers: Potential killers stalk
Victoria's fieldsiv; Killer mushrooms invade picnic spotsv; Wild fungi death trapvi; Poisonous mushrooms claim
victims by the hundredvii; and Beware the killer mushroomsviii.
Fortunately there were also some more positive representations, although these were rare exceptions
such as:
Underground loveliesix; Don’t overlook the beauty of the mushroomx; The enchanted woodxi; Autumn gloryxii; and
The fantastic fungusxiii.
So have these portrayals of fungi perhaps influenced their inclusion or exclusion in Australian
biodiversity management? This is difficult to determine, but to get some impression, I've been examining
policy, legislation and various types of biodiversity and national park management documents. I began
by analysing the management plans of forty Australian National Parks, with a similar approach to how
Dave Minter assessed the Biodiversity Strategies of the signatories of the Convention on Biological
Diversityxiv.
In summary, of the 40 plans I’ve perused, thirty percent make no mention of fungi. These are
management plans that among other aims, such as managing tourism and infrastructure are supposed to
"manage" biodiversity. Of those that do mention fungi, almost 90% are in reference to fungi as
pathogens, that is, as agents of disease. As agents of disease, fungi were mentioned only in the context
of being a threat, with no mention of other fungal species that might require protection from threats.
While acknowledging that there are some seriously destructive pathogenic fungi, the fact that fungi are
only mentioned as disease agents and not as organisms performing vital ecological roles or being in need
of protection inevitably has great potential to influence public perception of fungi. The fact that
Australia's piece of national biodiversity protection legislation, The Environment Protection and Biodiversity
Conservation Act 1999 only mentions two species of fungi – both as 'threats' – is another prime example of
how public understanding of fungi might be negatively influencedxv.
On average each report had less than three references to fungi, relative to 185 to plants and 175 to
animals. All of these Management Plans were written within the last 25 years, during which time one
might have hoped public understanding of fungi to have grown, especially given the increased
production of fungal resources such as field guides in the last three decades. Furthermore, all states and
territories had various acts and policies in place to protect biodiversity at the time the management plans
were written, although admittedly these acts and policies also made no or inadequate reference to fungi
in definitions of biodiversity.
The Management Plans that did mention fungi other than as agents of disease only did so in very
generic statements such as, "The park contains a large variety of fungi"xvi. Without exception, the 70% of
Plans that did mention fungi, all showed taxonomic confusion. Of those that actually defined
biodiversity, all defined it incorrectly as not being inclusive of fungi. Fungi were also often wrongly or
inappropriately classified; as “lower plants”, “non-vascular plants”, “lower life forms” or “microorganisms”.
In terms of action towards fungal conservation, only one of forty Plans made a cursory suggestion
toward fungal conservation, that being to: “Encourage survey and research into flora (including rare or
threatened species), plant communities, fungi and bryophytes in the park"xvii. However, it doesn't take
much reading between the lines to recognise that the word “encourage” along with the absence of any
further recommendations, actions, allocated funding or other resources might suggest a lack of any
genuine commitment.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
These findings reflect all the same issues identified by David Minter. None of this will come as any
surprise to many of you. I've essentially reconfirmed what we already knew. However, the absence of
fungi in these plans suggests that biodiversity managers, policy writers, conservation funding bodies and
those that influence the future of fungal conservation are perhaps less aware of the lack of inclusion of
fungi in such documents. These findings may therefore be a useful lever to open dialogues with
conservation managers to expand concepts of biodiversity and include fungi in conservation.
This leads me to ask the obvious question, "How do we inspire public and political interest in fungi and
fungal conservation"? Who are the best translators, story-tellers, messengers and strategists to convey
and negotiate issues of fungal conservation? Various researchers across numerous fields have
demonstrated that people make decisions on a multiplicity of factors, outside of factual information. As
fungal conservationists we must also consider these factors rather than just assume that more or better
information will in itself lead to more conservation-oriented perspectives.
Education is of course intrinsic to increasing knowledge and understanding environmental issues,
including those that involve fungi. However, education on its own is not enough and more data doesn't
usually inspire an environmental ethic or advance conservation. For example, while species loss is an
environmental crisis, environmental crises have become normalised, so more information on further
threatened species is unlikely to make much difference. Urgent warnings about massively accelerated
extinction rates or impacts of climate change are likely to be transmitted as routine tweets, than as
events that might give us pausexviii. Hence, continuing to impart more data may not be the best strategy.
Another approach might be to consider ways to connect intellect, affect and emotion. To explore the
interface between science, relationality and imagination. To inspire action driven not just by anxiety, but
by hope.
Of course we need to map, measure and quantify fungal diversity if we are to effectively manage and
conserve it. But I also think it's vital that we don't allow fungi to become just a set of numbers. Fungi are
so much more than something to be simply counted. I'm not suggesting that we stop counting, but
rather that we might also consider ways to enrich this, with other ways of knowing fungi, to re-imagine
the affective dimensions of fungi. Australian environmental historian, Libby Robin, says that "Counting
alone is not enough. Caring, is also essential. This is what motivates action, including political
action."xix
I applaud Dave Minter for initiating the ISFC along with Tom May for initiating and driving Fungimap
in Australia along with everyone working on fungal conservation. Such organisations are vital, but
ultimately, I believe it's about individuals, as David and Tom have shown. It's about passion and drive
and determination of individual people. Whether part of a committee, society, organisation or friends-of
group, it's individuals who make the real difference and drive change.
Fungal conservation requires both scientific and social contributions and those to facilitate
communication. We also need to engage the third and often overlooked corner of the conservation
triangle, that is, the need for political involvement to reinforce and legislate conservation measures.
Fungal conservation will never have the economic urgency of environmental issues such as those
concerning water or soil or others that are seen as more closely connected to human well-being. Science
may provide the foundation of knowledge for conservation, but aesthetic, humanistic and political
contributions, are what turn knowledge, into action.
I'm aware that I've posed more questions regarding fungal conservation than I've answered. But I guess
my intention is to prompt a reconsideration, a re-imagining of what fungal conservation is and could be.
Let's not reduce this amazing kingdom only to numbers. Let's also not forget the tiny pink parasols, the
crying ear and the glowing ghosts that might inspire not only young minds, but hearts as well.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
References
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
ix.
x.
xi.
xii.
xiii.
xiv.
xv.
xvi.
xvii.
xviii.
xix.
Heise, U. (2008). Sense of Place and Sense of Planet - The Environmental Imagination of the Global. Oxford
University Press, Oxford., quoting Ulrich Beck's concept of “world risk society” in the context of
imagining the global from enviromental perspectives.
Höög, V. & Liljefors, M. (2012). Editorial: The Image in Science. Responses of the Humanities to
Visualism in Science. Ideas in History, Journal of the Nordic Society for the History of Ideas 5: 3-9.
Lakoff, G. (2010). Why it matters how we frame the environment. Environmental Communication 4 (1):
70-81.
The Age Newspaper 21.04.2003
Herald Sun Newspaper 04.04.2012
The Geelong Advertiser 29.04.2001
The Age 26.05.1987
Stonnington Leader 30.04.2001
The Weekend Australian 28.06.2003
The Age Newspaper 06.06.1988
The Age Newspaper 10.06.1997
The Age Newspaper 15.03.2005
Newcastle Herald 22.08.2008
Minter, D ( ). Fungal Conservation and Sustainability in Europe. Unpublished Report.
A. Pouliot and T. May (2010), The Third 'F' - Fungi in Australian Biodiversity Conservation: Actions,
Issues and Initiatives, Mycologia Balcanica 7: 27-34.
Parks Victoria (2003). Grampians National Park Management Plan. Parks Victoria, Melbourne. p.16
Ibid. Parks Victoria (2003).
Cohen, T. (2012). Introduction: Murmurations —“Climate Change” and the Defacement of Theory.
In: Telemorphosis: Theory in the Era of Climate Change, Vol. 1. Michigan Publishing, Michigan, p.1
Robin, L. (2013). Counting our blessings. Unpublished paper presented at "Landscape, Environment,
Emotion" Conference. Pori, Finland 25 September 2013.
The Global Fungal Red List Initiative
A short guide to red-listing non-lichen-forming ascomycetes with some on-line
information sources
D.W. Minter
Chairman, IUCN Species Survival Commission Specialist Group for Cup Fungi, Truffles and their
Allies. 4 Esk Terrace, Whitby, North Yorkshire, YO21 1PA, UK. E-mail: d.minter@cabi.org
Introduction
Thanks to generous funding by the Mohamed Bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund and much initiative
and hard work from Anders Dahlberg, Michael Krikorev and Greg Mueller, an interactive website,
the Global Fungal Red List Initiative [GFRLI], has been set up for red-listing fungi
[http://iucn.ekoo.se]. Organized on behalf of the five fungal specialist groups of the IUCN Species
Survival Commission, the aim is to make fungal red-listing easy. That is important because few
people have experience in evaluating fungi using IUCN Categories and Criteria
[www.iucnredlist.org/documents/redlist_cats_crit_en.pdf].
This paper is a short guide to help you red-list non-lichen-forming ascomycetes, with advice about
some on-line information sources. The guide will hopefully add consistency to evaluations, but
52
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
comment and discussion are needed. Please suggest improvements and additions. Because the sources
are all available on the Internet, anybody can access them. They are an absolute minimum, and for
authoritative evaluations other sources should also be consulted. See also the Global Sampled Red List
Index of the Ascomycota website [www.cybertruffle.org.uk/redlidat]. A clear statement about source
material makes it easier for peer-reviewers to accept your evaluation. If you evaluate a fungus covered
by my Specialist Group, please consult the on-line information sources listed here, and state clearly
that you have used them [recommended wording: ‘This evaluation used on-line information sources
recommended by Minter (2014)’ and cite this paper in the bibliography].
Getting started
Open the website [http://iucn.ekoo.se] and familiarize yourself with its layout. Click on ‘View All
Proposals’ to see what’s already been done. Click on any of the species already proposed, and look at
the page layout. The distribution maps are disconcerting: the projection used is Mercator (or
something very similar) and northern latitudes are disproportionately large. Furthermore, a single
record for Canada, for example, results in the whole area of Canada becoming coloured. It’s a very
blunt tool. Leaving aside the map, review what has been written in each section about the selected
fungus. If you look at a range of different species, you will see variation in the amount of detail
provided. Which ones are best? They are the ones to use as models for your first evaluation.
Before you try to make that first evaluation, gather all of your information together in a text editor
or word-processor separate from the website. Then, when everything is ready, you can cut and paste
paragraphs into the different sections of the website. Bear in mind that you will also need a good
illustration of your fungus, and it must be one for which you have copyright or permission to use from
the copyright owner.
When you are ready, you can log-in. On the first occasion you will have to set up an account.
After that is done, click on ‘Add New Proposal’, and you will be given an interactive screen on which
to enter your data. Having selected the name of the species you want to evaluate, the interactive
screen will state on the left hand side ‘Proposed by: Michael Krikorev’. It gives the uncomfortable
impression that the evaluation has already been made. That is just a glitch in the program. Ignore it:
after you have gone to the prompt ‘Do you want to propose this species for a Global Red List
Assessment’ and clicked ‘yes’ Michael’s name will be replaced by yours.
Preparing the data: the fungus name
Make a list of all the scientific names which have been used for your fungus. IndexFungorum
[www.indexfungorum.org] and Mycobank [www.mycobank.org] are two websites which supply
information about currently accepted fungal names and their synonyms. You need the synonyms
because the other information necessary for evaluating your fungus could be out there under any of
those names. Then decide which names in your list are worth using in searches. Some may be obscure
and never taken up, but often several will have been used in the past. Make clear which names you
have used for searching by citing them in the taxonomic notes section of the evaluation. It’s daunting,
but take heart, some of the key websites check all synonyms for you automatically.
Observational information
To red-list a species, you need observational information (where, when and on what it has been
observed). Consult ALL of the following on-line databases (they all, more or less, check synonyms for
you automatically), and please alert me to useful databases not on this list.
• Association of British Fungal Groups [http://cate.abfg.org]. Much overlap with the Checklist of Fungi
of the British Isles website.
• Belgian Species List [www.species.be/en/index.php].
• Checklist of Fungi of the British Isles [www.fieldmycology.net/GBCHKLST/gbchklst.asp]. Much
overlap with the Association of British Fungal Groups website.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Cybertruffle
[www.cybertruffle.org.uk].
Find
the
fungus
using
Cybernome
[www.cybertruffle.org.uk/cybernome/eng]. If observational information is available, a hyperlink
“Biological Records Database” will be visible.
Dutch species catalogue [www.nederlandsesoorten.nl/nlsr/nlsr/english.html].
E-biodiversity - the Estonian biodiversity website [http://elurikkus.ut.ee/index.php?lang=eng].
GBIF - the Global Biodiversity Information Facility [http://data.gbif.org].
The Database of the Former IMI Reference Collection [www.herbimi.info]. Much of the information in
this database is incomplete and needs further editing. Use it with caution.
Landcare Research New Zealand [http://nzfungi.landcareresearch.co.nz/html/mycology.asp].
USDA Fungal Databases [http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases].
Additional observational information relating to original collections and type specimens can be found
in the original descriptions of species, and in the catalogues of Saccardo’s Sylloge Fungorum, Petrak’s
Lists, Index of Fungi, Saccardo’s Omissions, and Petrak’s Omissions. Very occasionally you may also need
to use the catalogues for lichen-forming fungi (Lamb, and Zahlbruckner). Much of this information is
only a click away when you check fungal names in IndexFungorum. It can also be accessed through
Cyberliber, the on-line digital mycological library [www.cybertruffle.org.uk/cyberliber]. When
evaluating the conservation status of non-lichen-forming fungi (any fungi, actually), all catalogue
references to all relevant scientific names should be taken into account.
The on-line databases listed above do not provide comprehensive information. GBIF, for example,
has limited functionality: it will tell you where and when your fungus has been seen, but nothing
about associated organisms or substrata. Collectively these databases provide good coverage of a few
countries (e.g. Belgium, Chile, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Ireland, Netherlands,
New Zealand, Puerto Rico, Trinidad & Tobago, Ukraine, UK, USA, Venezuela), sketchy coverage of
some others (e.g. Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, Kenya, Malaysia, Nigeria, Slovakia,
South Africa, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Uganda) and poor coverage of most of the remainder (e.g.
Antarctica, Belarus, China, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Mongolia, Russia,
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan).
That means other sources of information must be explored to improve coverage. At present, that
can only be done by making several different type of search. A straight search of Google
[www.google.co.uk] is likely to result in many hits. Some (perhaps most) will be irrelevant, but you
may encounter high-quality amateur sites, for example, with valuable observational information. A
search of Google Images [www.google.com/imghp] can also be useful in finding relevant websites.
Google Scholar [http://scholar.google.co.uk] should be helpful in finding relevant research papers.
Remember that Google is not the only search engine. For Chinese sources, for example, Baidu
[www.baidu.com] is important, and for Russian sources Yandex [www.yandex.com] can be consulted.
Be aware of the ‘filter bubble’ phenomenon: Internet search engines often use algorithms which offer
different results based on the track-record they have of a given user.
Cyberliber provides open access to almost 400,000 pages of mycological literature. These include
key regional works not available elsewhere on the Internet (such as Ethel Doidge’s checklist of South
African fungi and lichens published in Bothalia, and the fungal volumes in the series Flora of Spore
Plants
of
Kazakhstan).
In
addition,
Cyberliber’s
cumulative
index
search
[www.cybertruffle.org.uk/cyberliber/huntspec.htm] will find occurrences of a species name (and
often of its synonyms) by searching about a million records from indexes of mycological publications.
It may also be worthwhile using the search facilities on the Biodiversity Heritage Library website
[www.biodiversitylibrary.org].
The information collected from all of these sources can be used in several different sections of the
GFRLI evaluation form. Locality information helps you to describe the geographical range. The
dates when observations have been made in each country are useful for evaluating populations, trends
and possible local extinctions. You are also likely to have a list of associated organisms and substrata
and, perhaps, additional information about the biology of the fungus. These can be used in the
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Habitat and Ecology section. Finally, you may have found information about the regional
conservation status of the fungus which can be used in the Conservation Actions section.
It is often necessary to make the most of very limited observational information. A species known
from only one country is more at risk than a species known from more than one countries. A species
known from one continent is more at risk than a species known from more than one continent. A
species known from only one associated organism is more at risk than a species known from more
than one associated organism. No records for 50 years from a country with a long tradition of field
mycology and good nature conservation practices is stronger evidence of extinction than no records
from a country where nobody has been looking. Considerations of this sort were used as an overlay
on top of IUCN criteria when the Global Sampled Red List Index of the Ascomyceta was prepared, and the
website for that project has a detailed discussion of the
issues involved
[www.cybertruffle.org.uk/redlidat].
Estimating extent of occurrence and area of occupation
The GFRLI website does not mention the terms “extent of occurrence” and “area of occupation” (it’s
an understandable decision to keep things simple), but in fact these two statistics are expected when
evaluations are submitted to IUCN, and the sooner fungal conservationists get used to them, the
better.
Extent of occurrence is defined as the area covered by a polygon connecting the furthest separate
points where the organism has been observed. The idea is to have some measure of how likely the
organism is to suffer extinction as a result of a catastrophic event. The smaller the extent of
occurrence, so the theory goes, the smaller the catastrophic event required to wipe out the organism.
Area of occupation is a measure of the area actually covered by the organism. The statistic was
originally devised for elephants, hippos and other animals, and measured the area they were
wandering about in. When its use was taken up for plants, a decision was made that each observation
should be regarded as the centre of a hypothetical square 2 km × 2 km. We have inherited that
definition and put it into use for fungi.
The question then arises, how (without a PhD in maths) does one calculate the area of the polygon
on the surface of a globe? Fortunately, there’s a neat piece of software developed by Steve Bachman at
the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. It’s called Geocat [http://geocat.kew.org], and with it, you can click
on a map to mark all the points where your fungus has been found. It then calculates the extent of
occurrence and area of occupation for you, and even offers an opinion of what each statistic means in
conservation terms. To use the software, open it with a suitable web browser, click on “Start a new
project”, then click on “ADD POINTS”, then click on “Enables EOO/AOO” (it’s not obvious - its
top right of the screen), then away you go (if you explore, you will also find more sophisticated ways
to use the website).
It’s not perfect. If the polygon covers a really big part of the globe, for example with several
records in Africa, others in North America, and a third cluster in Asia, the software bursts into tears
and produces very variable results. To get round that problem, it is best to produce individual
estimates for each continent, and then add them together at the end.
Associated organism names
It is important that the scientific names of associated organisms are spelt correctly and, where
possible, be accompanied by the author(s) of the name. The following on-line sources should be
consulted.
• Algae. Algaebase [www.algaebase.org].
• Animals. Encyclopedia of Life [http://eol.org].
• Bacteria. List of Prokaryotic Names [www.bacterio.net].
• Fungi. IndexFungorum [www.indexfungorum.org].
• Plants. The Plant List [www.theplantlist.org] useful because it often provides opinion about the
acceptability of a given name, but not as extensive in coverage as The International Plant Names
Index [www.ipni.org].
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
•
Protists. Encyclopedia of Life [http://eol.org].
The Global Names Index [http://gni.globalnames.org], the Catalogue of Life. [www.catalogueoflife.org]
and Wikipedia [www.wikipedia.org] are also very useful.
Conservation status of associated organisms
If only a small number of organisms are associated with the fungus you are evaluating, it may be
relevant to check whether they themselves are red-listed. That can be done by consulting the IUCN
Red List of Threatened Species [www.iucnredlist.org]. If the only plant known to bear your fungus is
itself endangered, then the fungus is likely to be at least as endangered, and probably even more so.
This is useful information for the Population and Trends section of the GFRLI evaluation form.
Threats
Investigative journalism techniques are needed here, and the Internet is a very fertile place for such
research. Don’t think only in terms of academic pubications. Blogs, newspapers, and commercial sites
may also have valuable informaton. The common threats to organisms come from climate change,
habitat destruction, persecution, pollution, and unsustainable use. With what you have already found
out about the geographical distribution of your fungus, ask yourself if any of these could possibly be
relevant. Here are some example questions.
Climate change. Is the fungus sensitive to climate? Is it in a habitat threatened by climate change? If
climate change makes that habitat untenable in one place, does the fungus have alternative habitats to
go to and the means of travelling there? Will such a fungus be treated as an invasive when it is, in fact,
a refugee?
Habitat destruction. Are any of the places where the fungus is known designated as protected areas?
Are any of those protected areas threatened, for example by proposals for industrial development?
Are the protected areas where the fungus occurs managed in a way sympathetic to the needs of the
fungus? Is there evidence of habitat destruction in other places where the fungus is known? Is that
habitat destruction widespread or localized? Chopping down rainforests for oil palm plantations is not
the only type of habitat destruction. War, for example, can be as bad for fungal populations as it is for
everything else.
Persecution. Is the fungus perceived as undesirable? If it is associated only with one plant species
which is itself endangered, for example, it is possible that well-meaning but misguided conservationist
might try to eradicate it. Are chemical controls in use aimed at other organisms, but which could
adversely affect the fungus? Some fungi are persecuted because they are viewed as invasives. Some of
those categorized as invasives may in fact be refugees.
Pollution. Is anything known about the susceptibility of this fungus to pollution? If so, what evidence
is there for that type of pollution in areas where the species is known to occur? Are associated
organisms susceptible to pollution? If so, will that mean the habitat for this fungus is threatened?
Pollution can take many forms, some may not seem at first sight like pollution. For example
antibiotic dietary supplements for domestic animals may render their dung unsuitable for specialist
fungi.
Unsustainable use. Is the fungus being collected at unsustainable levels? If this is suspected, try typing
the scientific name, or better a vernacular name for the fungus into Google along with the word ‘buy’.
Doing this in a range of different languages could tell you how international that trade has become.
You then have the problem of trying to assess the scale of the operation in each country. What is the
harvesting season? How much is being harvested daily? Weekly? Over what area? Who is doing the
harvesting? Who is buying? Who is distributing? Who knows about it? Are the buyers aware of
possible conservation concern? There are many questions. Unsustainable trade in wild species tends
to be secretive in nature. Knowledge of how social media websites function and fluency in the
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
relevant language become useful. Frankly, fungal conservation here urgently needs the experience and
expertise of those working with endangered animals and plants: we have so much to learn.
Conservation actions
The various searches already recommended are likely to have picked up any on-line information
about in situ conservation. It is also worth bearing in mind that some fungi are stored in culture
collections. Although the reason they are stored is rarely if ever for their protection, the fact that they
are alive outside their natural environment is relevant. Genetic material of the fungus may also be
stored even if the sequence is only part of the whole code of the species. The following websites may
be useful for locating isolates in culture collections and stored genetic code.
• CABI Culture Collection [http://cabi.bio-aware.com/Biolomics.aspx?Table=GRC+catalogue].
• CBS Culture Collection [www.cbs.knaw.nl/Collections/Biolomics.aspx?Table=CBS strain
database].
• National Center for Biotechnology Information [www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov].
Concluding remarks
The new GFRLI website is a big step forward for fungal conservation in general and the IUCN redlisting process in particular. Three years ago, I attempted to propose a fungus for the IUCN red list,
and found that, while theoretically possible, it could not be done in practice because the IUCN’s own
database of organism names did not include any fungi. I typed in the name of my species and was
told by the computer that it had not been recognized.
What a change now! Thanks to collaboration from Paul Kirk and IndexFungorum, the IUCN’s
database has been populated with fungal names, and thanks to Anders Dahlberg, Michael Krikorev
and Greg Mueller, together with the generosity of the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund,
there is now a website dedicated to making fungal red-listing easy. It’s important for fungal
conservationists to support their efforts by proposing species through this website.
It’s a step in the right direction, but it’s not the end of the journey. By making the process more
easy, some corners have been cut. When fungal conservationists have had the experience of proposing
a tranche of species, and when the IUCN Species Survival Commission fungal specialist groups have
had the experience of reviewing those proposals, we will all have a much better idea of what we are
doing and where we are going.
Even at this stage, however, it is important that this website is not allowed to degenerate into some
kind of “red-listing lite” process. The case made for each species must be scientifically rigorous.
Source websites listed here are only the beginning. Most information needed is still not on-line, but
basic standards for source information, and readily available tools like Geocat can help us all improve
our ability to propose and protect these beautiful organisms. After receiving your helpful feedback and
suggestions for improvement, I hope to publish a more developed form of this note on the Internet
with updates as appropriate. Recommendations suitable for one group of fungi are helpful: fuller
recommendations for all groups would be better. I therefore invite the other Chairs of IUCN Species
Survival Commission fungal specialist groups to consider a fuller document covering all fungi.
At present, to make an evaluation, we need a human to sift through sources (many already
digitized), and select and re-type the information into a different computer system. Looking further
into the future, I hope there will be co-operation between the various main fungal databases to
mechanize some of that work. Many aspects of evaluation do not need a human present, so long as
the computer can be programmed to recognize decisions it cannot make. It should be possible one
day to type the name of a species, and for the computer then to search different occurrences databases
and, in real time, produce a simple evaluation of the organism’s current conservation status.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Fungal conservation and the CBD: focus on Belgium. A Micheli
Guide Review
David Minter
President, International Society for Fungal Conservation. 4 Esk Terrace, Whitby, North Yorkshire,
YO21 1PA, UK. E-mail: d.minter@cabi.org
Introduction
Belgium has just submitted its revised National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan to the Rio
Convention on Biological Diversity [CBD], so now is a good time to ask how well its government is
delivering fungal conservation. This Micheli Guide [www.fungal-conservation.org/micheli.htm]
review is based entirely on the plans and reports Belgium has produced for the CBD - the Belgian
government’s own descriptions of what it has done and plans to do - but, as with book reviews, the
facts are accompanied by this reviewer’s interpretation and opinions.
Belgium signed the CBD on 5 June 1996. Since then, it has sent thirteen documents to the
Convention, all in English. All are openly available on-line from the CBD website
[www.cbd.int/nbsap]. Two, about the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, are outside the scope of the
present review. I assessed the others using the Micheli Standard Evaluation Form [www.fungalconservation.org/micheli/cbd-report-form.doc].
How the Micheli Standard Evaluation Form works
Fungus words are ‘fung’ (as in ‘fungal’,
‘fungi’ and ‘fungus’), ‘lichen’ (but not
To measure how much attention fungi get compared
German words like ‘wissenschaftlichen’),
with animals and plants, the form provides three lists
‘myc’ (as in ‘ascomycete’, ‘basidiomycete’,
of words: one for fungi, another for animals and the
‘mycology’ etc.), ‘mould’, ‘mushroom’, ‘rust’
third for plants (see text box). By counting how often
(but not ‘crustacean’), ‘smut’, ‘toadstool’,
each occurs in the document under review, you get an
‘truffle’ and ‘yeast’). Animal words are
‘amphibian’, ‘animal’, ‘bird’, ‘fauna’, ‘fish’,
estimate. But beware! That estimate is very rough and
‘insect’, ‘mammal’, ‘reptile’ and ‘vertebrate’
ready. Although these lists accurately measure
(which will also find ‘invertebrate’). Plant
attention to fungi, they consistently and very markedly
words are ‘bryophyte’, ‘conifer’, ‘fern’,
underestimate attention to animals and plants. This is
‘flora’, ‘flower’, ‘moss’ and ‘plant’ (but not
because English has only a few vernacular words for
phrases like ‘sewage treatment plant’).
fungi (and all the main ones are in this list), but there
are many English words for animals and plants which are not present (for example ‘arthropod’, ‘bat’,
‘bee’, ‘beetle’, ‘butterfly’, ‘crustacean’, ‘dolphin’, ‘dragonfly’, ‘duck’, ‘falcon’, ‘poplar’, ‘rose’, ‘willow’
etc.).
The form also asks five questions. 1. Are fungi mentioned? 2. Are they clearly and consistently
recognized as different from animals and plants? 3. Is strategic consideration given to fungal
conservation? 4. Are fungal habitats and roles taken into account? 5. Is the knowledge gap for fungi
recognized, with plans to address the problem? Five ‘no’ answers mean the document is totally
deficient in its coverage of fungal conservation. Four ‘no’ answers mean seriously deficient. Three
mean deficient. Two mean poor. One means nearly adequate. None (i.e. all answers are ‘yes’) means
adequate (doing the minimum necessary). To be good, the document must score five ‘yes’ answers
AND, in the opinion of the reviewer, be protecting fungi at more than the necessary minimum. To
date, no CBD document reviewed has been worthy of all five ‘yes’ answers, and most are evaluated
as poor or worse.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
The numbers of animal, fungal and plant words in Belgium’s CBD documents are shown in Table 1.
Fungi have clearly received far less attention than animals or plants and, for the reasons given above,
the imbalance is much greater than these very rough and ready and conservative statistics show.
Table 1. Number of times selected animal, fungal and plant words occurred in CBD country
reports from Belgium
Document name [date received by CBD]
First National Report [5 May 1998]
Second National Report [17 August 2001]
Thematic Report on Forest Ecosystems [11 September
2002]
Thematic Report on Protected Areas [17 July 2003]
Report on Implementation of GTI Work Programme [20
September 2004]
Third National Report [7 September 2005]
National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan [18
January 2007]
Review of the Implementation of the Protected Areas
Work Programme [3 April 2007]
Voluntary Report on Implementation of the Programme
of Work on Marine and Coastal Biological Diversity [13
February 2009]
Fourth National Report [5 October 2009]
National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (version
2) [7 July 2014]
Animals
Fungi
Plants
191
119
31
9
27
2
92
95
20
11
110
0
32
1
49
296
208
67
9
252
114
17
0
4
62
0
9
119
288
19
11
145
148
Reports where fungi are not mentioned at all
There are three reports in this category. Two deal with protected areas. They contain no evidence at
all that fungi are taken into account when defining protected areas in Belgium. Using animals and
plants to define protected areas results in places rich in animal and plant diversity getting protected.
Fungi may also benefit, but if so, then it’s only by happenstance. We know, for example, that some
habitats are highly diverse in fungi, but not in plants. In addition, protecting particular plant species
does not necessarily protect the fungi associated with them: not all pine-inhabiting fungi, for example,
are found in every pine forest - some pine forests are richer in some fungi, and other pine forests are
richer in others. There is no evidence from the protected areas reports that the authors are aware of
the concept of ‘Important Fungus Areas’, even though such areas undoubtedly exist in Belgium [for
one example, see www.inbo.be/docupload/2321.pdf]. Overlooking fungi when designating protected
areas is not good.
The third report deals with marine and coastal biodiversity. Type ‘Belgian coast’ into Google Images,
and you will see extensive and beautiful beaches backed by dunes where marram grass (Ammophila
arenaria) is abundant. Marram is critically important for these ecosystems, and fungi are critically
important for marram. Type ‘mycorrhiza ammophila’ into Google and you very rapidly find evidence
that arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi play a key role in establishment, growth and survival of marram
and other coastal dune plants [http://cadair.aber.ac.uk/dspace/handle/2160/2449], and that
sporulation of the beneficial fungi may be affected by climatic factors. Without taking fungi into
account, how can plans be made to protect these dunes? And there are lots of other fungi in these
ecosystems, all playing their own particular and important roles. What about all the lichen-forming
fungi in the lichen-rich dune heaths? What about the specialist sand-dune ascomycetes and
basidiomycetes? What about marine fungi?
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Each of these three reports gets five ‘no’ answers and no ‘yes’ answers: from the perspective of fungal
conservation they are all totally deficient.
The Forest Ecosystem Report
In this report, there were only two references to fungi. The first was in the context of undesirable alien
organisms. The second was a brief statement about monitoring various organisms within Brussels
region. Fungi mentioned? Yes. Fungi clearly and consistently recognized as separate from animals
and plants? Maybe. The report contains no mention of ectomycorrhizal fungi, even though their
presence is necessary for the survival of forests, nor of fungal saprobes and the ecological services they
provide by recycling nutrients. Fungal endobionts are not mentioned, nor any other fungal symbioses
(and there are lots out there, ranging from mutualism through to strongly parasitic - a whole spectrum
of ecological roles where many of the natural checks and balances of forests are to be found). There is
no evidence in this report of awareness that temperate forest trees sustain enormous fungal diversity.
The report names Fagus sylvatica, Larix decidua, Picea abies, Pinus nigra, P. sylvestris, Pseudotsuga
menziesii, Quercus petraea and Q. robur as the country’s main forest trees. Collectively, these are known
throughout their range to be associated with literally hundreds if not thousands of different fungal
species [www.cybertruffle.org.uk/cybernome/eng], and for all of these trees the number of known
associated fungal species continues to grow. If this huge diversity really is being taken into account,
why is there no mention of it?
This report gets three ‘no’ answers and two ‘yes’ answers: from the perspective of fungal conservation
it is deficient.
The National Biodiversity Strategy and Actions Plan of 2007 and its 2014 revision
The 2007 document and its 2014 revision both make a promising start. The mushroom Tricholomopsis
rutilans appears among photographs on both front covers. In both the definition of biodiversity at the
start of part 1 states that, ‘biodiversity, or biological diversity, is the variety of all life forms - plants,
animals, fungi and micro-organisms’, and on several other occasions both reports clearly state that
fungi belong in their own separate biological kingdom. That’s very good. Two ‘yes’ answers already.
Unfortunately, after such a good start, both documents lose the plot. There is then only one other
mention of fungi in each: an expression of concern that genetically modified crops might be bad for
mycorrhizal fungi. As a mention, it is not so bad. It recognizes that fungi are valuable and might be
threatened. What a pity both documents failed to take this further. Having recognized that fungi are
on a par with animals, plants and other biological kingdoms, each plan goes on to mention animals
more than 200 times, and plants more than 100 times. What happened to the fungi? Why didn’t the
fungi get fair treatment? Let’s try to find out.
Look at how animal words are used in these documents and it rapidly becomes clear that ‘fish’
accounts for just over 50% of all occurrences. That is so unlikely to be random that I immediately
wondered, ‘are Belgians pre-occupied with fish?’ The answer is, ‘no more so than anyone else’. A
quick scan of recent CBD reports from European countries showed that references to fish were
prominent in all of them. ‘Fish’ accounted for at least 30% of all animal words in the reports of
Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, the EU, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Germany,
Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain,
Sweden, Turkey and the UK. Documents from countries outside the EU also show this pattern. If it
weren’t for the presence of two landlocked countries in the list above, a cynic might wonder if this
emphasis were more to do with fishing rights turf wars than protection of nature.
‘Flora and faunaism’
In both documents ‘animal’ and ‘fauna’, and ‘plant’ and ‘flora’ are the most prominent words from
the Micheli lists. They appear overwhelmingly in the following phrases: ‘animals and plants’, ‘plants
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
and animals’, ‘fauna and flora’, ‘flora and fauna’. In every case they are a lazy and misleading
shorthand for biodiversity. Such use implies that animals and plants are the only components of
biodiversity, which is simply not true, and by making that implication, fungi and other organisms like
bacteria and protists get excluded. Both documents could be greatly improved by replacing those
misleading phrases with something more precise. Here are some examples from the 2007 version (the
2014 version is similar).
•
•
•
•
•
•
Page 16. ‘Groundwater pumping leads to desiccation of wetlands and disappearance of related
fauna and flora’. Wetlands support a huge diversity of specialist fungi: in the 1940s, Ted and
Martin Ellis, in eastern England, issued a whole exsiccatum series entitled ‘Marsh and Fen
Fungi’. Belgium, just over the North Sea, must surely share most if not all of those species. They
are threatened by desiccation just as much as any animal or plant. Better to say ‘related animals,
fungi and plants’.
Page 23. ‘The ‘Contrat d’avenir pour les wallonnes et les wallons’ was adopted by the Walloon
Government on 20.01.2005. One of the objectives of this Contract is to stimulate efforts to avoid
the disappearance of animal and plant species, in line with the EU Objective to halt the loss of
biodiversity by 2010. To this end, the Contract proposes to mobilise all available human resources
and integrate existing activities to create a real network of protected natural environments
favourable to the development of fauna and flora’. Why not fungi too? If animals and plants are
to thrive, conditions must be favourable for fungi.
Page 39. ‘For instance... ...information campaigns could address the following issues: soil
management best practices, impacts of pesticides on wild fauna...’ What about impacts of
fungicides on wild fungi?
Page 55. ‘Plants and microbes have long been, and remain today, an important basis for the
development of medicines such as quinine, morphine, penicillin etc.’ At the start of part 1, the
document correctly defined biodiversity as ‘plants, animals, fungi and micro-organisms’, and
Penicillium - the source of penicillin - is a fungus, so why suddenly omit fungi at this point? Better
to say ‘Fungi, micro-organisms and plants’.
Page 61. ‘More research is needed to gain an idea of the effects of present day agrotechnology on
both agricultural biodiversity and wild flora and fauna’. Better to say ‘wild animals, fungi and
plants’.
Page 70. ‘An increasing amount of scientific research on the flora and fauna of Antarctica is
underway...’ This is ridiculous. The mycobiota of Antarctica is far more extensive than its flora.
Better to say ‘animals, fungi and plants of Antarctica’.
These small editorial changes would result in an enormous improvement. The documents explicitly
recognize that fungi are a separate component of biodiversity, so why not enjoy the credit for
explicitly including them throughout the text?
Fungal habitats and roles
The fourth question on the Micheli form is: ‘are fungal habitats and roles taken into account?’ Since
both the 2007 and the 2014 document both mention mycorrhiza, even if only once, it is clear that the
authors were aware of at least one important ecological service provided by fungi. But mentioning it
once, and then only in the context of threats from genetically modified crops, could hardly be
described as ‘taking fungal habitats and roles into account’.
The knowledge gap
The fifth question on the Micheli form is, ‘is the knowledge gap for fungi recognized, with plans to
address the problem?’ The answer is a clear, ‘no’. Sadly, the document itself is clear evidence of the
knowledge gap (and of the serious lack of awareness of the importance of fungi). That self-evident
evidence was not recognized by the authors, and no plans were made to do anything about the
problem.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Summary
In these two documents, fungi were mentioned, and correctly and clearly recognized as a separate
group of organisms, but there was no strategic consideration of their conservation, no evidence that
fungal habitats and ecological roles have been taken into account, no recognition of the knowledge
gap for fungi, and no plans to address that problem. Each document gets two ‘yes’ answers and three
‘no’ answers. From a fungal conservation perspective they are both deficient.
CITES, the Bird Directive and the Habitats Directive - a case for strategic
consideration of the fungi
There are a few places where ‘fauna and flora’ and ‘animals and plants’ cannot be easily replaced
by ‘animals, fungi and plants’. Most involve the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species [CITES]. That convention covers ‘fauna and flora’ because those consulted
at the time did not make sure fungi were included. The spirit of the convention surely extends to
protecting fungi endangered by international trade. Unfortunately, the wording of the convention
(the part any good lawyer would emphasize) does not. But some fungi are endangered by
international trade, and they too need protection: boletes, chanterelles, medicinal fungi (like
Ophiocordyceps sinensis), morels and truffles are all potential candidates.
The only other common animal word in these documents is ‘bird’. Looking at how it is used leads
to a similar issue. The conservation movement owes a great debt to birdwatchers. Being so
numerous and influential, they have provided the political pressure which drives conservation
along. The prominence given to birds in these two documents reflects the powerful lobbying by
birders, not just in Belgium, but across the European Union as a whole, and that leads us to EU
conservation
law.
In
the
words
of
its
own
website
[http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/legislation/habitatsdirective], the Birds Directive,
together with the Habitats Directive ‘form the cornerstone of Europe’s nature conservation
policy’. It is not surprising that birds are emphasized in these documents, but what is the
implication of the Habitats Directive? Unfortunately, like CITES, the EU Habitats Directive deals
with conservation of wild fauna and flora. As the EU website already cited says, the Habitats
Directive protects over 1,000 animals and plant species. Fungi are not covered. Doubtless the
spirit of the directive extends to protecting them, but the wording, like that of CITES, does not.
These loopholes in international conservation law need to be closed.
The First National Report
The word ‘fungus’ occurred nine times (once in relation to biodiversity of the Brussels Capital Region,
once in relation to work in China, and seven times in the context of ex situ collections, generally
alongside bacteria as ‘micro-organisms’). The word ‘yeast’ occurred five times (only in the context of
ex situ collections). The words ‘lichen’, ‘mould’, ‘mushroom’, ‘rust’, ‘smut’, ‘toadstool’ and ‘truffle’
did not occur at all. There were no instances of ‘myc’ as a combination of letters (as in ‘mycology’,
‘basidiomycete’ etc.). There was no mention at all of fungi for the Flemish and Walloon Regions (i.e.
for well over 95% of Belgium). Fungi were mentioned once in the context of conservation, but that
was in the section about work in China. There was no consideration of in situ fungal conservation in
Belgium. There was one photograph of a fungus (Isaria sp.) growing in pure culture, and Cryptococcus
neoformans was mentioned once.
By comparison, the animal words used for this evaluation occurred almost 200 times (and many other
animal words were also present in the text), and plant words occurred almost 100 times (and other
plant words were also in the text). The dominant animal words were ‘fish’, ‘bird’, ‘fauna’ and
‘animal’, and the dominant plant words were ‘plant’ and ‘flora’. These words were prominent for the
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
same reasons as in Belgium’s National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plans: ‘flora and faunaism’,
CITES, the Birds Directive and the Habitats Directive.
It is not clear whether the authors of this report understood that fungi are a separate group of
organisms - fungus words did not occur frequently enough - but at least the fungi were not explicitly
confused with plants. There was no evidence of strategic thinking about fungal conservation. Belgium
has excellent fungal culture collections and these were mentioned in the context of ex situ
conservation, but the text makes clear that these collections exist as a service to the scientific and
industrial communities. In other words, they are primarily for exploitation of fungi; there was no
evidence of any policy to store fungal cultures because the species are threatened. There was no
evidence of fungal habitats and ecological roles being taken into account, and no recognition of the
knowledge gap for fungi, nor plans to deal with that gap. So this report gets two ‘yes’ answers and
three ‘no’ answers: from a fungal conservation perspective it is deficient.
The Second National Report
The word ‘fungus’ occurred twelve times (three times in relation to inventory work by the National
Botanic Garden of Belgium, once each in relation to work in Benin, Cuba, Papua New Guinea, subSaharan Africa, and west Africa, three times in the context of ex situ collections, generally alongside
bacteria as ‘micro-organisms’, and once in the title of one bibliographic reference). The word ‘yeast’
occurred three times (only in the context of ex situ collections). The word ‘lichen’ occurred twice (one
in relation to the National Botanic Garden’s inventory work, and the other in relation to work in
Papua New Guinea). The word ‘mushroom’ occurred twice, both times in relation to work in west
Africa. The words ‘mould’, ‘rust’, ‘smut’, ‘toadstool’ and ‘truffle’ were not used. There were eight
instances of ‘myc’ as a combination of letters in ‘mycorrhizal’ (three occurrences, two for west Africa,
one for Belgium itself), ‘mycology’ (used to describe a database, a publication and reference
collections) and ‘mycothéque’ (used in the context of one reference collection).
By comparison, the animal words used for this evaluation occurred almost 120 times, and plant words
occurred almost 100 times. The dominant animal words were ‘bird’, ‘fish’, ‘fauna’ and ‘animal’, and
the dominant plant words were ‘plant’ and ‘flora’. The reasons for these words being dominant
seemed to be the same as in the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan documents: more
‘flora and faunaism’.
Fungus words were too infrequent to tell if the report authors understood that they are a separate
group of organisms, but in several instances there was evidence of confusion with plants (e.g. use of
terms like ‘flora’ rather than ‘mycobiota’), and confusion about the status of lichens (listed separately
from fungi). There was no evidence of strategic thinking about fungal conservation. Although the
word ‘mycorrhiza’ was used, there was no evidence of fungal habitats and ecological roles being
taken into account, and there was no recognition of the knowledge gap for fungi, nor were there plans
to deal with that gap. Many references to fungi in this report related to work outside Belgium. It’s
great that less wealthy countries are being helped with research on fungi. It’s a pity that, in this report,
Belgium showed so little interest in protecting its own fungi. This report gets one ‘yes’ answer and
four ‘no’ answers: from a fungal conservation perspective it is seriously deficient.
The Third National Report
Fungus words occurred 67 times. The word ‘fungus’ itself occurred 28 times (twelve times in relation
to inventory work by the National Botanic Garden of Belgium, ten times in all for collaborative work
in China, Cuba, Gabon, Papua New Guinea, southeast Asia and tropical Africa, five times in the
context of ex situ collections, generally alongside bacteria as ‘micro-organisms’, and once in the word
‘fungicide’). The word ‘yeast’ occurred five times (only in the context of ex situ collections). The word
‘lichen’ occurred seven times (four times in relation to inventory work within Belgium, twice in
relation to scientific publications, and once in relation to work in Papua New Guinea). The word
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
‘mushroom’ occurred twice, both times in relation to laws governing wild harvesting in the Brussels
Capital Region. The word ‘mould’ occurred once in the context of ‘slime moulds’. The words ‘rust’,
‘smut’, ‘toadstool’ and ‘truffle’ were not used. There were 24 instances of ‘myc’ as a combination of
letters in various words including ‘ethnomycology’ (work in Benin and Burkina Faso), ‘mycology’
(work in Benin, Burkina Faso and Gabon) and ‘mycorrhizal’ (in west Africa, and in Belgium itself).
By comparison, the animal words used for this evaluation occurred almost 300 times (and other
animal words were also present in the text), and plant words occurred more than 250 times. The
dominant animal words were ‘bird’, ‘fish’, ‘fauna’ and ‘animal’, and the dominant plant words were
plant and ‘flora’. The reasons for these words being dominant seemed to be the same as in the
National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan documents.
Although fungi were sometimes described as micro-organisms, and lichen-forming fungi sometimes
treated separately from other fungi, the authors of this report in general got the basic taxonomy right:
they recognized that fungi are a distinct group of organisms. It was encouraging to see fungi
mentioned more often, but there was still no evidence of strategic planning for fungal conservation, or
of consideration of fungal habitats and ecological roles (except, curiously, a little for other countries
where Belgian scientists were working). There was still no acknowledgement of the knowledge gap for
fungi, nor were there any plans to deal with that gap. This report gets two ‘yes’ answers and three ‘no’
answers: from a fungal conservation perspective it is deficient.
The Fourth National Report
Fungus words occurred 19 times. The word ‘fungus’ itself occurred 10 times (mostly in definitions of
biodiversity, never in reference to collaborative work outside Belgium). The word ‘lichen’ occurred
five times. The word ‘mushroom’ occurred once (in relation to Africa). The words ‘mould’, ‘rust’,
‘smut’, ‘toadstool’, ‘truffle’ and ‘yeast’ were not used. There were three instances of ‘myc’ as a
combination of letters, in each case as part of the name of a taxonomic group (‘Ascomycetes’ etc.).
Animal words occurred almost 200 times (and other animal words were also present in the text), and
plant words occurred almost 150 times. The dominant animal words were ‘fish’, ‘bird’, ‘animal’,
‘amphibian’ and ‘fauna’, and the dominant plant words were ‘plant’ and ‘flora’. The reasons for these
words being dominant seemed to be the same as in the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action
Plan documents: ‘flora and faunaism’ rampant.
This report contains several very clear statements recognizing that fungi are different from animals,
micro-organisms and plants: Belgium’s first national report to do this, and a very welcome
development. Unfortunately, it also contains several other instances where fungi are equally explicitly
confused with plants. Most of these occurred because fungi received attention in the section relating
to the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation. That raises some important issues for fungal
conservation, which will be discussed later. It does, however, mean that this report, despite some
positive developments, cannot be said to have got the science right. This report gets one ‘yes’ answer
and four ‘no’ answers: from a fungal conservation perspective it is seriously deficient.
The Report on Implementation of the GTI Work Programme
GTI is an abbreviation for the CBD’s Global Taxonomy Initiative, set up to deal with the so-called
‘taxonomic impediment’: the world’s biodiversity is very poorly known, with far too few people and
resources available to put the problem right. Having the GTI as its theme makes this report a bit
different. It is just about taxonomy, so some Micheli form questions may not be appropriate. We
cannot expect this report to take much account of fungal habitats and roles, but it really should deal
with the knowledge gap for fungi, a problem overlooked by all Belgium’s other CBD documents.
With taxonomy as its theme, this report mentions fungi more often than those other documents and,
although there is plenty of ‘flora and faunaism’, they are correctly and consistently recognized as
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
separate from animals and plants. But does that mean all is well with Belgium’s attention to the
knowledge gap for fungi? Let’s take a closer look.
The word ‘fungus’ occurs 15 times in the document. Two instances simply record the country’s fungal
reference collections with no evidence to show they are actually in use to tackle the ‘taxonomic
impediment’. Four others relate to collaboration in tropical Africa and the Indo-Pacific region (great
for addressing the ‘taxonomic impediment’ at a global level and surely also enhancing Belgium’s pool
of taxonomic expertise if only indirectly). Another simply affirms that natural history societies in
Belgium are active and include mycologist members: true, no doubt, but hardly a contribution from
the government. Two of the remainder are about the Species 2000 / Catalogue of Life project, and the
rest relate to research projects within Belgium or in Europe as a whole. These are devoted wholly or
partly to fungi and myxomycetes (but funding sources are not given). The letters ‘myc’ are mostly
found in phrases which also have the word ‘fungus’ - they have already been discussed. The one
exception was for a project on mycorrhizal fungi symbiotic with trees in Europe and Africa. The word
‘lichen’ occurs three times, all relating to research projects at two universities (funding sources not
stated), and the word ‘yeast’ occurs once as part of the description of Belgium’s culture collections,
again without evidence that the resource is in use to tackle the ‘taxonomic impediment’. It’s a pity
that information about funding is absent: if the government is paying, it should receive credit for the
work. In summary, some resources are being provided and some work is going on, but on
examination coverage is less extensive than it looked at first sight, and it is not always clear how the
work described is helping to reduce the knowledge gap for fungi.
On the other hand, the report does not mention any plans for raising a new generation of
taxonomists. There is no discussion of how infant, primary and secondary school curricula should
stimulate interest in those organisms for which taxonomists are needed (Finland, to its credit,
recognized these issues and included them in the country’s Fourth National Report). Such discussions
should range beyond just schools. They should also ask, ‘are there museums with exhibitions about
the overlooked taxonomic groups which we all agree are so important?’ (again, well done Finland)
and, ‘where is the funding for these important educational components?’ and, ‘are there tertiary-level
courses suitable for producing qualified taxonomists?’ The report doesn’t mention money (those
newly trained taxonomists will want salaries): the long time taken to train taxonomists should not be
wasted. If ‘citizen science’ - contributions by amateurs - is to be a factor, where is the provision to
support their public-spirited involvement, and where are the plans to ensure the few professional
taxonomists can co-ordinate them?
We can at least say that the report recognizes part of the knowledge gap for fungi and that some steps
have been taken to deal with some parts of the problem. Two cheers.
‘Flora and faunaism’ - an intellectual straitjacket disastrous for conservation
Deconstruct these documents, and two conflicting themes emerge. On the one hand, there is solid
science, typified by the several times repeated unambiguous, clear and correct statement that
biodiversity means animals, fungi, plants and micro-organisms. On the other hand, there is persistent
use of the traditional term ‘flora and fauna’ as an out-of-date and lazy shorthand to mean biodiversity
in general. It’s so strange to see them together. It’s like reading a document about chemistry which
refers equally to elements like oxygen, potassium and uranium, and to the old alchemist concepts of
air, earth, fire and water, as though both concepts were correct and compatible.
Conservation of biodiversity cannot be achieved by considering only the producers (plants) and
consumers (animals). We must also protect the recyclers, and recognize the ecosystem services
provided by fungi and micro-organisms. No fungi: no mycorrhizas: no forests or agricultural crops:
no air to breathe and no food. Taking fungi and the checks and balances they contribute out of the
equation is like looking at a clock and saying, ‘if we remove the escapement mechanism, it will run so
much more quickly!’ Thinking only in terms of ‘flora and fauna’ or ‘plants and animals’ leads directly
to exactly that sort of mistake.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Throughout these reports we have seen the fungi overlooked and consistently undervalued (the
present paper is about fungi, but it must be evident to all that micro-organisms have been similarly
treated). The intellectual straitjacket of ‘flora and faunaism’ is to blame. It’s the reason why,
throughout the world, displays in natural history museums are so locked in to fur, feathers and
dinosaurs, and educational curricula provide such poor coverage of fungi in the biological sciences.
It’s the reason why mycologists continue to occupy obscure corners of botanical institutions. It’s the
reason mycologists haven’t been consulted when CBD documents are prepared. And its influence is
so deep seated as to be almost subconscious: many contributors to Belgium’s 2007 National
Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan were employed by the ‘Federal Public Service for Health, Food
Chain Security and Environment’. Even the title of their organization reflects the blind bias of ‘flora
and faunaism’. It’s not a food chain. Food doesn’t go from here to there and then stop. It comes
round again to be re-used. It’s a nutrient cycle. They forgot the fungi.
Fungi and the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation
The two conflicting themes are most evident in Belgium’s fourth national report to the CBD because
information about fungi was included in the section devoted to the Global Strategy for Plant
Conservation. That strategy is the result of years of activity by botanists, and is widely recognized and
adopted by CBD countries. In conservation terms, it’s a great achievement. Mycologists should and
do welcome it. But it is all about plants, and fungi are not plants. Botanists are undoubtedly wellmeaning when they try to include fungi in their strategy - in that way fungi get at least some mention
in CBD reports - but those kind intentions do not translate into genuine benefit for fungal
conservation. They just perpetuate the misconception that ‘flora and fauna’ is the same as
biodiversity. A totally new global strategy for fungal conservation is needed with the same status as
the plant strategy. Good conservation cannot be based on a fundamental misunderstanding.
Challenges for everyone
Belgium was chosen for this review simply because at the time of writing, it was the most recent
country to have submitted documentation to the CBD. From the perspective of fungal conservation,
Belgium’s CBD documents have not received good scores - it would be unrealistic to pretend
otherwise - but there is the potential for much good to come out of this review.
In its strategy, Belgium has correctly recognized that fungi are different from animals and plants, so it
would be logical and consistent to acknowledge the loopholes in CITES and the Habitats Directive
and work towards closing them. With its long history of mycological expertise, the country could also
support development of a ‘Global Strategy for Fungal Conservation’. It would be a great response to
the IUCN’s 2012 call to all governments ‘to give greater priority to mycology... ...as an essential basis
for future conservation measures’. All of these activities would be compatible with objective 12 of
Belgium’s biodiversity strategy (to influence the international agenda within biodiversity related
conventions), they would be particularly compatible with objective 12.2, where Belgium aspires to
play a leading role, and they would carry the additional kudos of winning approval from fungal
conservationists and getting a ‘yes’ to the third question on the Micheli form: ‘is strategic
consideration given to fungal conservation?’
Giving fungi appropriate recognition in the conservation arena is a joint responsibility of the national
conservation agencies and the mycologists who are expert in their field. Funding is almost always a
serious constraint, both in employing fungal experts and providing research grants, but it must be
recognized that the conservation agencies themselves are often given inadequate financial support.
Conservation is also highly dependent on support from a public that is poorly educated in fungal
matters. Nevertheless, it costs nothing to get the terminology right, and little or nothing to make it
clear that our knowledge is inadequate of fungi and their conservation requirements. Even these small
steps will have an impact in the longer term.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Resolution WCC-2012-Res-33-EN of the IUCN’s 2012 World Conference in Korea called for
increasing attention to be given to conservation of fungi, and unequivocally stated that ‘the muchused phrase “animals and plants” is not a sufficient description of all life on earth’. We, as fungal
conservationists, must use that resolution. We must learn to recognize where conservation policy is
failing fungi, and we must become good at drawing those deficiencies to the attention of governments
in a diplomatic and positive manner. We must also develop our capacity to respond to their requests
for information and advice. Consultations about biodiversity should be inclusive, with representatives
of all biological kingdoms having a direct voice at the same level: the glass ceiling which currently
prevents mycologists from being heard must become a thing of the past. If all of this happens, the
outcome will be more than terminological accuracy in CBD reports: the world will know a great deal
more about fungi, their myriad roles will be recognized in the global ecosystem, and – perhaps –
global extinction rates will be slowed.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Index
News articles
2
Bringing Fungi Into The Conservation Conversation: The Global
Fungal Red List Initiative
Greg Mueller, Anders
Dahlberg & Michael
Krikorev
12
The Fungi Museum in Zagreb, Croatia
Vlado Jamnicky
16
A good candidate for International Fungus Day
Abdel Al-Azeem
19
Journey across fungal conservation in Serbia
Boris Ivančević
21
Some Critically Endangered Species From Turkey
Handan Çinar,
Hayrünisa Baş Sermenli
& Mustafa Işiloğlu
26
Some Endangered Taxa From Turkey
K. Selen Özbay,
Hayrünisa Baş Sermenli
& Mustafa Işiloğlu
29
Fungi from forests for food, medicine and livelihood:
conservation issues in India
N.S.K. Harsh
30
First steps in myxomycete conservation activities
Tetyana Krivomaz
35
Conservation of Tricholoma species in Turkey
İsmail Şen & Hakan Alli
40
Fungi and Action Plan for the Conservation of Biodiversity:
what happens in Tuscany (Italy)?
Claudia Perini,
Maria D’Aguanno &
Elena Salerni
42
Ex situ conservation of fungi from forests of India – a national
type culture collection
N.S.K. Harsh
45
Myco-entanglement - public perceptions of fungi in biodiversity
conservation
Alison Pouliot
46
The Global Fungal Red List Initiative. A short guide to red-listing
non-lichen-forming ascomycetes with some on-line information
sources
David Minter
52
Fungal conservation and the CBD: focus on Belgium. A Micheli
Guide Review
David Minter
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Fungal Conservation no. 4, February 2014
Issued and © by the International Society for Fungal Conservation, postal address 4 Esk Terrace,
Whitby, North Yorkshire YO21 1PA, UK.
The views of contributors are not necessarily those held by the International Society for Fungal
Conservation.
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR FUNGAL CONSERVATION
www.fungal-conservation.org
The International Society for Fungal Conservation was established in August 2010, and now has members in over
fifty countries. The objective of the Society is to promote conservation of fungi globally. It acts as a global
federation for fungal conservation groups, supporting, guiding, co-ordinating and functioning as a forum for
regional, national and local bodies seeking to promote fungal conservation. Membership is open to any
individual or organization with a genuine interest in fungal conservation. The Society’s Council consists of its
Officers, Elected Councillors, Representatives of External Organizations and Regional Delegates.
Officers
President, Dr David Minter [UK] d.minter<at>cabi.org
Vice-President. Dr Lorelei Norvell [USA] llnorvell<at>pnw-ms.com
Secretary. Dr Marieka Gryzenhout [South Africa] gryzenhoutm<at>ufs.ac.za
Treasurer. Dr Jo Taylor [UK] drjotaylor<at>yahoo.co.uk
Membership Secretary. Dr Peter Buchanan [New Zealand] buchananp<at>landcareresearch.co.nz
Editor. Dr Paul Cannon [UK] p.cannon<at>cabi.org
Communications Officer. Dr Maria Alice Neves [Brazil] maliceneves<at>gmail.com
Elected Councillors
Dr Rafael Castañeda Ruíz [Cuba] ivigoa<at>infomed.sld.cu
Dr Stephanos Diamandis [Greece] diamandi<at>fri.gr
Prof. David Hawksworth [UK] d.hawksworth<at>nhm.ac.uk
Prof. Maria Ławrynowicz [Poland] miklaw<at>biol.uni.lodz.pl
Prof. Roy Watling [UK] caledonianmyc<at>blueyonder.co.uk
Representatives of External Organizations
International Mycological Association, Dr Marieka Gryzenhout [see above for details]
IUCN Chytrid, Downy Mildew, Slime Mould and Zygomycete Specialist Group, Dr Mayra Camino [Cuba]
mcamino<at>fbio.uh.cu
IUCN Cup fungi, Truffles and their Allies Specialist Group, Dr David Minter [UK] d.minter<at>cabi.org
IUCN Lichen Specialist Group, Dr Christoph Scheidegger [Switzerland] christoph.scheidegger<at>wsl.ch
IUCN
Mushroom,
Bracket
and
Puffball
Specialist
Group,
Dr
Greg
Mueller
[USA]
gmueller<at>chicagobotanic.org
IUCN Rust and Smut Specialist Group, Dr Cvetomir Denchev [Bulgaria] cmdenchev<at>yahoo.co.uk
Regional Delegates
Africa (Central), Dr George Ngala [Cameroon] gnngala<at>yahoo.com
Africa (Northern), Dr Ahmed Abdel-Azeem [Egypt] zemo3000<at>yahoo.com
Africa (Southern), Dr Cathy Sharp [Zimbabwe] mycofreedom<at>yoafrica.com
Antarctica, Dr Paul Bridge [UK] p.bridge<at>cabi.org
Arctic, Atlantic and Indian Oceans, to be appointed
Asia (Central & Western), to be appointed
Asia (Eastern), Dr Tsutomu Hattori [Japan], hattori<at>affrc.go.jp
Asia (Northern), to be appointed
Asia (South & Southeastern), to be appointed
Australasia, Dr Sapphire McMullen-Fisher (representative of Organization
sapphire<at>flyangler.com.au
Central America & the Caribbean, to be appointed
Europe, Dr Vera Hayova [Ukraine] vera.hayova<at>i.ua
North America (Boreal), to be appointed
North America (Temperate-tropical), to be appointed
Oceania, to be appointed
South America (Temperate), to be appointed
South America (Tropical), to be appointed
69
Member
Fungimap),
Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
Supporting the International Society for Fungal Conservation
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Fungal Conservation issue 4: February 2014
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