References

Alexopolous, C.J, Mims, C.W, Blackwell, M. 2004. Introductory Mycology, 4th ed. John Wiley

 and Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey, USA.

Allen, T. <URL: http://www.organicvalley.coop/recipes/show/minnesota-chicken-morels-and-wild-rice-hot-

dish/>. Accessed November 21 2013.

Briggs, J. 2010. Finding morel mushrooms- tops on where to look for this elusive delicacy.

Bunyard, B.A, Nicholson, M.S, Royse, D.J. 1995. Phylogenetic resolution of Morchella, Verpa,

 and Disciotis (Pezizales: Morchellaceae) based on restriction enzyme analysis of the 28S

 ribosomal RNA gene. Experimental Mycology 3: 223–33.

Celtnet Recipes. <URL: http://www.celtnet.org.uk/recipes/ancient/wild-food-entry.php?

term=Morel>. Accessed November 20 2013.

Dahlstrom J.L., Smith J.E., Weber N.S. 2000. Mycorrhiza-like interaction by Morchella with

         species of the Pinaceae in pure culture synthesis. Mycorrhiza 9:279-285.

Emery M. R. and Barron E. S. 2010. Using local ecological knowledge to assess morel decline in

             the U.S. Mid-Atlantic region. Economic Botany 64:205-216.

Ferguson, B.A, Dreisbach, T.A, Parks, C.G, Filip, G.M, Schmitt, C.L. 2003. Coarse-scale

population structure of pathogenic Armillaria species in a mixed-conifer forest in the Blue

 Mountains of northeast Oregon. 

Freedman, L. 2000. Morchella angusticeps, M. conica, M. deliciosa, M. esculenta. The

            Mycological Society of San Fransisco.

Gessner, R. V., Romano, M. A. & Schultz, R. W. 1987. Allelic variation and segregation

               in Morchella deliciosa and M. esculenta. Mycologia 79, 683-687.

Hansen, K and Pfister, D.H. 2006). Systematics of the Pezizomycetes--the operculate

 discomycetes. Mycologia 6: 1029–1040.

Harbin, M. and T.J. Volk. 1999. The relationship of Morchella with plant roots. Abstracts

XVI International Botanical Congress, St. Louis, MS. USA, p 559.

Mihail JD, Bruhn JN, Bonello P. 2007. Spatial and temporal patterns of morel fruiting. Mycol

            Res 111:339–346.

Leonard, T.J., Volk,T.J. 1992. Production of new edible mushrooms in North America: shiitake

 and morels in Frontiers in Industrial Mycology. Chapman Hall 1-23.

Lutzoni F, et al. 2004. Assembling the fungal tree of life: progress, classification, and evolution of

 subcellular traits. American Journal of Botany 10: 1446–1480.

Martin, E.A, 1983. Macmillan Dictionary of Life Sciences. Macmillian press, London,

England.

Roody, W.C. 2003. Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians. University Press

 of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, USA.

Rooney A.P., Mills G.L., Kuo M., Weber N.S., Rehner S.A. 2011. Phylogeny and historical

         biogeography of true morels (Morchella) reveals an early cretaceous origin and high

         continental endemism and provincialism in the holarctic. Funcal Genet Biol 48: 252-265.

Volk, T.J and Leonard, T. J. 1990. Cytology of the life cycle of Morchella. Mycological Research

 94:399-406.

Volk, T. J. and Leonard, T. J. 1989. Experimental studies on the morel, I. Heterokaryon

              formation between monoascosporous strains of Morchella. Mycologia 81, 523-531.

Wartinbee, D. 2009. Morel of the story: Wildfires spark good mushroom growth.

Wiita A.L. and T. L. Wurtz. 2004. The Morel Mushroom Industry in Alaska: Current Status and

         Potential. University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Yoon, Cheol-Sik, Robert V. Gessner, and Michael A. Romano. "Population genetics and

systematics of the Morchella esculenta complex." Mycologia (1990): 227-235.

 

To continue on your journey, head to Contact Me next!

For more interesting websites on other organisms, visit MultipleOrganisms.net