 |
Fungi
Chang, Y.S., Gates, G.M. & Ratkowsky, D.A. (2006). Some new species of the Strophariaceae (Agaricales) in Tasmania. Australasian Mycologist 24: 53-68.
Gates, G.M. & Noordeloos, M. (2007). Preliminary studies in the genus Entoloma in Tasmania - I. Persoonia 19: 157-226.
Gates, G.M. & Ratkowsky, D.A. (2009). Comparing indigenous and European-based concepts of seasonality for predicting macrofungal fruiting activity in Tasmania. Australasian Mycologist 28: 36-42.
Gates, G.M. (2009). Coarse woody debris, macrofungal assemblages, and sustainable forest management in a Eucalyptus obliqua forest of southern Tasmania. Doctoral thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
Gates, G.M., Ratkowsky, D.A., & Grove, S.J. (2005). A comparison of macrofungi in young silvicultural regeneration and mature forest at the Warra LTER site in the Southern Forests of Tasmania. Tasforests 16: 127-152.
Gates, G.M., Horton, B.M., and Noordeloos, M. (2009). A new Entomoloma (Basidiomycetes, Agaricales) from Tasmania. Mycotaxon 107: 175-179.
Gates, G.M., Ratkowsky, D.A. & Grove, S.J. (2009). Aggregated retention and macrofungi: a case study from the Warra LTER site, Tasmania. Tasforests 18: 33-54.
Grove, S.J. (2009). A decade of deadwoodology at Warra. The Tasmanian Naturalist 131: 25-35.
Hopkins, A. (2006). The taxonomy and ecology of wood decay fungi in Eucalyptus obliqua trees and logs in the wet sclerophyll forests of southern Tasmania. Doctoral thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
Hopkins, A.J.M., Harrison, K.S., Grove, S.J., Wardlaw, T.J., & Mohammed, C.L. (2005). Wood decay fungi and beetle assemblages associated with living Eucalyptus obliqua trees: early results from studies at the Warra LTER Site, Tasmania. Tasforests 16: 111-126.
Jarman, S.J. & Kantvilas, G. (2001). Bryophytes and lichens at the Warra LTER Site. II. Understorey habitats in Eucalyptus obliqua wet sclerophyll forest. Tasforests 13: 217-244.
Kantvilas, G. & Jarman, S.J. (2002). Using lichens and bryophytes to evaluate the effects of silvicultural practices in Tasmanian wet eucalypt forest. In: Nimis, P.L., Scheidegger, C. & Wolseley, P.A. (Ed.), Monitoring with Lichens - Monitoring Lichens. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, pp. 367-371.
Kantvilas, G. & Jarman, S.J. (2004). Lichens and bryophytes on Eucalyptus obliqua in Tasmania: management implications in production forests. Biological Conservation 117: 359-373.
Kantvilas, G. (2009). The genus Mycoblastus in the cool temperate Southern Hemisphere, with special reference to Tasmania. The Lichenologist 41: 151-178.
Noordeloos, M. & Gates, G.M. (2009). Preliminary studies in the genus Entoloma in Tasmania - II. Cryptogamie, Mycologie 30: 107-140.
Ratkowsky, D.A. & Gates, G.M. (2008). Generalised canonical correlations analysis for explaining macrofungal species assemblages. Australasian Mycologist 27: 33-40.
Ratkowsky, D.A. & Gates, G.M. (2008). Macrofungi in early stages of forest regeneration in Tasmania's southern forests. Tasforests 18: 56-66.
Ratkowsky, D.A. (2007). Visualising macrofungal species assemblage compositions using canonical discrimination analysis. Australasian Mycologist 26: 75-85.
Ratkowsky, D.A. (2008). Tests for dispersion among macrofungal species assemblages. Australasian Mycologist 27: 66-73.
Tedersoo, L., Gates, G., Dunk, C.W., Lebel, T., May, T.W., Koljalg, U. & Jairus, T. (2009). Establishment of ectomycorrhizal fungal community on isolated Nothofagus cunninghamii seedlings regenerating on dead wood in Australian wet temperate forests: does fruit-body type matter? Mycorrhiza 19: 403-416.
Trang, T.T. (2007). Resistance screening to fungal diseases for plantation eucalypts in Vietnam: molecular tools to assist fungal detection and identification. Masters Thesis, University of Tasmania, Hobart.
Wardlaw, T.J. (2003). The extent, impact and management of stem decay in young regrowth eucalypt forests scheduled for thinning in Tasmania. School of Agricultural Science, University of Tasmania.
Wardlaw, T., Grove, S., Hopkins, A., Yee, M., Harrison K. and Mohammed, C. (2009). The uniqueness of habitats in old eucalypts: contrasting wood-decay fungi and saproxylic beetles of young and old eucalypts. Tasforests 18: 17-32.
Yee, M., Yuan, Z.-Q., & Mohammed, C. (2001). Not just waste wood: decaying logs as key habitats in Tasmania's wet sclerophyll Eucalyptus obliqua production forests: the ecology of large and small logs compared. Tasforests 13: 119-128.
Yuan, Z.-Q. (2000). Long term monitoring of log decay in old growth forest at Warra (a summary report on intial establishment of the study). University of Tasmania, Hobart.
|