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IMA Committee
for Asia
NEWSLETTER
Profiles of
Committee Members
Professor Zuei Ching CHEN (Taiwan)
Professor Chen is Professor of Botany at the
National Taiwan University (NTU) in Taipei. He obtained his B.S.
from NTU, and M.S. and Ph.D degrees from the State University of
New York at Syracuse before joining the faculty of NTU in 1971.
His research interests include: rust fungi of forest trees and
grasses, wood decay fungi and their applications, the
cultivation of lignicolous edible fungi, mycorrhizae of natural
plant communities, aerobiology of fungal spores, host-parasite
interactions in diseases of forest trees, molecular taxonomy of
fungi, and the taxonomy of the Aphyllophorales. He is also
engaged in a general floristic survey of Formosan fungi.
Professor Chen is a member of the International Mycological
Association and the International Association of Aerobiology,
and is currently the Chairman of the International Mycological
Association Committee for Asia.
Dr. Tricita H. QUIMIO (Philippines)
Dr. Tricita H. Quimio is a professor at the
Department of Plant Pathology, University of the Philippines at
Los Baños (UPLB). She obtained her MS from the University of
Florida and PhD from North Carolina State University. Since
returning to the Philippines in the early 1970's after her
graduate studies abroad, she has introduced new mycology
courses at her institute, supervised 36 graduate students both
from the Philippines and from other Asian countries, and served
as visiting professor to universities abroad acting as
co-adviser and graduate committee member for mycology students
at universities in Pakistan, India and Hong Kong. Mycology
courses in many universities in the Philippines and Thailand are
now taught by her former students. She has published over 100
papers and other works including several standard reference
books on tropical fungi. A manual entitled "Illustrated Genera
and Species of Plant Pathogenic Fungi in the Tropics",written
with Dr. Hanlin of the University of Georgia, will be published
shortly.
Aside from taxonomy, Dr. Quimio continues to
conduct research on the cultivation of tropical mushrooms and,
in 1980, she organized a UNESCO-sponsored regional workshop on
mushroom cultivation in Manila. She was also instrumental in
establishing in 1980 the International Mushroom Society for the
Tropics, and the Philippine Mushroom Society in 1988. She
founded a Mushroom Mycelial Bank for the Tropics, heads a
Mushroom Training and Demonstration Unit, serves as a scientific
adviser on mushrooms for the International Foundation for
Science in Sweden, and is a international consultant for the
FAO in Rome assisting in the development of research and
extension programmes. Dr Quimio also re-established the
mycological herbarium destroyed during World War II. The
herbarium, now a component of the UPLB Museum of Natural
History, contains over 10,000 specimens, some of which date back
to the 1890's.
Dr. Jin-Torng PENG (Taiwan)
Dr Peng is Chief of the Department of Plant
Pathology, Taiwan Agricultural Research Institute. His main
research interests are: (a) survey, identification, sexuality,
interfertility, cryopreservation of Gandoerma species in
Taiwan; (b) survey, identification and cryopreservation of wild
mushrooms in Taiwan; and (c) cultural improvement of edible
mushrooms, such as Agaricus bisporus and Pleurotus
spp. (including Pleurotus eryngii and Pleurotus
cystidiosus.)
Dr. Sumalee PICHYANGKURA
(Thailand)
Dr Pichyangkura is a professor in the
Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn
University. She received her B.Sc degree from Chulalongkorn
University and then moved to Michigan State University to
undertake postgraduate studies in Medical Mycology with
Professor E.S. Beneke. After receiving an M.S degree, and in
1974 a Ph.D, she returned to Thailand to teach and conduct
research at Chulalongkorn University. Her research and
expertise covers several areas of interest including:
solid-state fermentation systems for enzyme production,
ubiquinone detection systems, identication of mushrooms, and
fungal protoplast fusion. She has organised international
conferences held in Bangkok and supported by UNESCO and the
International Mycological Association, and has been a visiting
scientist to Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyushu Universities in Japan, the
University of Innsbruck in Austria, and The Chinese University
of Hong Kong.
Professor John A. BUSWELL (Hong Kong)
Professor Buswell is a Senior Lecturer in the
Department of Biology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong. He
received his B.Sc. and Ph.D degrees from the University of
Birmingham, United Kingdom and, before moving to Hong Kong in
1990, has held posts in universities and research institutions
in the UK, United States, Sweden and France. His major research
interests are: fungal-mediated biodegradation and bioconversion
of lignocellulose; mushroom nutriceuticals; mushroom
biotechnology; food microbiology; and microbial degradation of
xenobiotics. He is currently Co-Director, Hong Kong MIRCEN;
Deputy Director, UNIDO-Chinese University of Hong Kong Centre
for International Services to Mushroom Biotechnology;
Secretary/Treasurer, World Society for Mushroom Biology and
Mushroom Products (WSMBMP); and Editor of theWSMBMP Bulletin.
Professor B.C. LODHA (India)
Professor Lodha is currently Head of the
Department of Plant Pathology, Rajasthan Agriculture University.
After obtaining his Ph.D degree from Rajasthan University, he
joined the faculty of the University in 1964 as Assistant
Professor in the Department of Botany. After returning from the
University of Toronto where he was a postdoctoral fellow, he was
Associate Professor in Plant Pathology at Haryana Agricultural
University before his appointment in 1984 to Professor of Plant
Pathology at Rajasthan Agricultural University. His major
research interests focus on the ecology and systematics of
ascomycete and hyphomycete fungi, and on the biological control
of soil borne plant pathogens. He is a past Vice-President and
President of the Mycological Society of India, a previous member
of the International Mycological Association, and is currently a
member of the International Committee on Plant Pathology
Teaching and Training. He has published over 30 scientific
papers and written several book chapters on mycological topics,
and has undertaken numerous academic visits to universities and
research institutes in North America, Europe, Japan and
Australia.
Dr. Jian-Yun ZHUANG (China)
Dr Zhuang graduated from Fujian Agricultural
College in 1970 with a degree in Plant Protection, and in 1984
received his Ph.D from the Graduate School of the Academia
Sinica. He is currently Research Professor at the Institute of
Microbiology, Academia Sinica, Beijing, and is a deputy director
of the Scientific Council of the Systematic Mycology and
Lichenology Laboratory (SMLL) located at the Institute. His
major research interests relate to taxonomic and biogeographical
studies of Chinese rust fungi and he has published over 60
papers on rust taxonomy. He is currently a Member of the
Executive Council of the Mycological Association of China,
Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Acta Mycologia Sinica, and a Member of
the Editorial Board for Cryptogamic Flora of China.
Dr Djafar ERSHAD (Iran)
Dr Ershad is currently Head of the Department
of Botany and Research Scientist at the Plant Pest and Diseases
Research Institute, Tehran, and also holds a teaching post at
the Tarbiat Modares University in Tehran. He is a Member of the
Agricultural Branch of the Iranian Academy of Sciences, serves
on the Committee for Agriculture, Scientific Research Council of
Iran, and is a
Member of the Editorial Board of the Iranian
Journal of Plant Pathology. He has published over 60 papers in
mycology and plant pathology, and is the author of the book,
"Fungi of Iran".
Introduction to Asian
Mycological Institutions
IRAN
Plant Pests and Diseases Institute (PPDRI),
Tehran
The Plant Pests & Diseases Research Institute
(PPDRI) was established as government specialist institute in
1943. The Institute is made up of ten departments including the
Department of Botany which was officially founded in 1967 and
now consists of three sparate sections including Mycology. The
Mycological Section employs six scientific and three technical
staff who work on the taxonomy of major fungal groups. The
section's major task is to collect and identify the fungi of
Iran, especially plant pathogens. The section also has a
herbarium which forms part of "Herbarium Ministerii Iranici
Agriculturae-IRAN" and contains about 10,000 specimens of
ascomycete, basidiomycete, deuteromycete and oomycete fungi.
TAIWAN
Mycological Section of the National Museum
of Natural Science, Taipei
The Mycological Section was established in
1991 and currently employs three research staff. It holds over
4,600 specimens (mostly basidiomycetes and ascomycetes)
including ca 400 living cultures representing
approximately 250 species of mainly wood decaying fungi. Copies
of the following recent publications emanating from the Section
are available on request:
1. Wu, S.H. 1995. A study of the genus
Phanerochaete (Aphyllophorales) with brown subicular hyphae.
Mycotaxon 54: 163-172.
2. Chang, T.T. and W.N. Chou. 1995.
Antrodia cinnamomea sp. nov. on Cinnamomum kanehirai
in Taiwan. Mycol. Res. 99: 756-758.
3. Wang, Y.Z. 1995. Notes on coprophilous
discomycetes from Taiwan II. Bull. Nation. Mus. Nat. Sci.
5: 147-152.
4. Wu, S.H. & C. Losi. 1995.
Phanerochaete parvispora sp. nov. (Aphyllophorales) from
Venetian Lagoon, Italy. Mycotaxon 55: 543-545.
5. Wu, S.H. 1995. Two new genera of
corticioid basidiomycetes with gloeocystidia and amyloid
basidiospores. Mycologia 87: 886-890.
6. Wu, S.H. & W.N. Chou. 1995. Four
Basidiomycotina new to Taiwan. Bull. Nation. Mus. Natu. Sci.
6: 139-146.
7. Wu, S.H. 1995. Twelve species of the
Aphyllophorales new to Taiwan. Fungi. Sci. 10:
9-22.
8. Wu, S.H. 1996. Studies on
Gloeocystidiellum sensu lato (Basidiomycotina) in Taiwan.
Mycotaxon 58
Mushroom Research Laboratory, Taiwan
Agricultural Research Institute
The Mushroom Research Laboratory has five
senior staff, four project assistants and two technicians. The
main topics of research are:
(a) breeding of edible mushrooms, including
Agaricus bisporus, Lentinula edodes, Pleurotus spp.,
Agrocybe sp., Auricularia spp. and Tricholoma
giganteum; (b) cultivation of edible mushrooms; (c) taxonomy
of wild mushrooms and Ganoderma spp.; and (d)
cryopreservation of the living cultures of wild mushrooms,
Ganoderma spp. and commercial edible mushrooms.
CHINA
The Systematic Mycology and Lichenology
Laboratory, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, Beijing
The Systematic Mycology & Lichenology
Laboratory (SMLL) was established in 1985.
The Laboratory is an academic research
institution where scientists both from within China and from
overseas can conduct fungal and lichen-related research. Both
Chinese and foreign researchers may submit applications to the
Laboratory in accordance with the "Guidelines for Applying to
SMLL for Research Projects" formulated by the Laboratory.
Following approval of a project proposal by the Academic
Council, successful applicants are able to work in, and receive
research funds from, the Laboratory. Foreign researchers are
financially supported by the Laboratory on a reciprocal exchange
basis. Chinese and foreign mycologists and lichenologists who
are supported by their own institutes are also welcome to
conduct their own research at the SMLL. In order to provide
basic information for a deeper understanding of modern life
sciences, for exploitation and utilization of fungal resources
as well as for the control of harmful fungi, the Laboratory's
research is directed to the comprehensive study of natural
systems and the evolution of myceteae (including myxomycetes,
oomycetes, lichenized and non-lichenized fungi). Species
diversity among fungi is examined from all angles including
morphology, anatomy, ecology, physiology, biochemistry, genetics
and biogeography, and at all levels (e.g. population biology,
ontogeny, cytology, molecular biology). Research in the
following areas currently receive support: molecular
evolutionary systematics of the myceteae; cellular systematics
of the myceteae; studies on endangered species or groups among
the myceteae which are of economic importance and have
potential applications; studies of systematic problems related
to myceteae which require immediate resolution in the context
of applied research and practice; the utilization, preservation
and taxonomy of important mycological resources; novel methods
in the study of myceteae systematics and related ecosystem
problems. The organizational structure of the SMLL includes a
Laboratory Director and Deputy Director, and a Scientific
Council which consists of a Council Director and Deputy Director
together with several Council Members. Since 1988, the SMLL has
produced an official publication, Mycosystema, which is
co-edited by Chinese and foreign experts and carries papers on
the systematics and evolution of fungi.
Herbarium Mycolgicum Academiae Sinicae (HMAS)
The Herbarium is a national collection of fungi founded in
1953. The collections include all those (except lichens)
previously held in the Mycological & Phytopathological Herbarium
of Qinghua University, Fungus Section of the Herbarium of the
Institute of Botany, former National Academy of Peiping. The
herbarium is funded by a direct grant and is under the auspices
of the Special Foundation for Taxonomic and Floral & Faunal
Studies, Academia Sinica. A total of 120000 specimens have been
catalogued including ca. 2000 type specimens, representing 17000
species belonging to 2300 genera (including synonyms). In
addition, there are some 250,000 items which are still unnamed.
Groups represented include the larger basidiomycetes,
discomycetes, plant parasitic fungi, and lichens. Some dried
cultures of microfungi are also deposited. The large majority of
specimens are from China, and some 30,000 foreign specimens
originate from 105 countries. About 1500-3000 specimens are
added each year. The Herbarium maintains a considerable number
of duplicate specimens which are available in exchange for named
specimens from other countries. The exchange of specimens is
made frequently with a number of herbaria located in Europe,
U.S.A., Canada, Japan, New Zealand, and elsewhere.Further
information can be obtained from: Associate Research Professor
Guo Lin, Curator, Herbarium Mycolgicum Academiae Sinicae (HMAS),
Institute of Microbiology, Academia Sinica, Beijing 100080,
China.
SINGAPORE
The School of Biological Sciences, The
National University of Singapore
¡@
Mycology is taught in the School of
Biological Sciences under the subject heading of Plant Biology.
In the first two years/levels of undergraduate study, the fungi
constitute small components of three Plant Biology modules,
namely Economic Botany, Plant Biodiveristy, and Plant Ecology
(under plant-microbe interactions). In the final/third level of
study leading to the first degree (B.Sc.), Mycology is offered
as a full 50-hour optional module along with other Plant Biology
courses. At this level. mycology is a popular choice with
between 60-70% of students normally opting to take the module.
The course focuses on fungal classification, ecology and some
aspects of physiology, and includes six 3-hr laboratory
classes/field trips. The role of fungi as plant pathogens is
taught as part of another third year/level module, Plant
Pathology, which includes a more extensive coverage of plant
viruses. For the B.Sc. Honours Botany Degree (fourth year/level
of study), Mycology is again offered as a full optional Plant
Biology module. Here, the emphasis is on fungal physiology
including growth and reproduction. Usually, about 50-60% of
eligible students opt for this module. Honours students are also
required to undertake a research project of about six months
duration in a chosen area of plant biology. Mycological and
fungal plant disease projects are usually popular.
¡@
The School has a well-equipped
research laboratory for mycology and plant pathology (fungal
pathogens). The current batch of Honours and postgraduate
students are conducting research on marine fungi, fungal
airspora, fungal enzymes, fungal chitosan, mycorrhiza, and plant
diseases caused by Pseudocercospora and Ganoderma
species. Collaborations with other specialists within the School
(with expertise in biochemistry, plant pathology, molecular
biology, and developmental biology) and in other
departments/faculties (chemistry, paediatrics), has permitted a
wide range of fungal-related studies to be undertaken. Teaching
and research in mycology within the School is supported by a
small culture collection built up over many years. Current M.Sc.
and Ph.D students of mycology include nationals from China,
India and Malaysia with good first degrees and proficiency in
English. Their studies are supported by
studentships/scholarships from the National University of
Singapore. Requests for application forms for postgraduate
studies should be directed to: The Registrar, National
University of Singapore, Kent Ridge Road, Singapore 119260.
MALAYSIA
The Tropical Mycological Laboratory,
Department of Botany, University of Malaysia.
Since its inauguaration, the Laboratory has
been host to many prominent mycologists the world over who have
visited on short attachments, during specimen collection trips,
or for the purpose of conducting research. The visits have led
to the establishment of many jointly-funded collaborative
research projects. The Laboratory is well-equipped and is used
for the training of undergraduate and postgraduate (M.Phil.,
Ph.D) students in both basic and applied mycology and in plant
biology. The facility also runs short courses on various topics
including culture collection techniques, mycological methods,
and the use and maintenance of the electron microscope. Many of
these courses are conducted in collaboration with overseas
experts, and are normally open to staff of other local
universities and research institutions.The Laboratory has also
served as the venue for numerous national and international
seminars and conferences. The research activities of the
Laboratory have been documented in many high quality research
papers, and more than 110 new genera/species of microfungi have
been recorded. In the latter context, the facility serves as an
internationally recognized reference centre where type material
of new Malaysian fungal taxa are maintained. Currently, various
microfungi are being screened as potential sources of
pharmaceutical products.
HONG KONG
¡@
Department
of Biology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Mycological-related
activities at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) are
largely concerned with the study of mushrooms and can be traced
back to 1960. This was the year when Shu-ting Chang, now
Professor Emeritus, first joined the staff of Chung Chi College,
one of three academic institutions in Hong Kong which, in 1963,
amalgamated to form what is now the University. Subsequently,
many biologists with widely varying backgrounds and expertise
from teaching and research institutions worldwide have been
attracted to CUHK by Professor Chang's pioneering work with
mushrooms. Mushroom-related activities at CUHK can be
conveniently described under the headings: Research, Training
and International Services At the present time, eight academic
staff of the Department of Biology, together with colleagues
from the Departments of Anatomy and Biochemistry, are engaged on
some aspect of mushroom-related research projects. The three
major research areas relate to: (i) the production, biological
evaluation and quality control of 'mushroom nutriceuticals';
(ii) the physiological and enzymological aspects of mushrooms in
relation to substrate utilisation, fruit body yields and other
bioconversion/bioremediation processes; and (iii) genetics and
molecular biology
A rapidly
expanding sector of mushroom biotechnology is the development of
mushroom nutriceuticals, a term used to describe a new class
of compounds extractable from either the mycelium or fruit body
of mushrooms and which exhibit medicinal and/or tonic qualities
and can serve as nutritional supplements. Several
multi-disciplinary research projects related to mushroom
nutriceuticals. These include:
(a) an
investigation of the hepatoprotective, antitumour and
toxicological activities of mushroom extracts and mushroom
secretory products; (b) molecular analysis of the in vivo
effect of protein-bound polysaccharide complex (PSPC) from
Tricholoma sp. on cytokine gene expression; (c)
immunomodulation activity of extracellular polysaccharide
(STC-20) from Tricholoma; (d) hypolipidaemic,
hypocholesterolaemic, hypotensive and other related
cardiovascular activities of edible mushroom products; (e)
mushrooms as a source of glycosidase inhibitors; (f) dietary
fibre content and composition of the fruiting bodies and
mycelium of edible mushrooms. Research projects involving
physiological and enzymological aspects of mushrooms include:
(a) the production of lignocellulolytic enzymes (cellulases,
hemicellulases and ligninases) from commercially important
edible mushroom species (e.g. Volvariella volvacea,
Flammulina velutipes, Lentinula edodes and Pleurotus
spp.; (b) purification, characterisation and secretion of
individual cellulases from V. volvacea during growth of
the fungus on natural substrates; (c) bioconversion of soybean
wastes into added-value products by mushroom fungi; (c) use of
mushroom biomass, mushroom products and spent mushroom substrate
as agents of bioremediation; (d) effect of lignin-related
phenols on the growth and lignocellulolytic activity of mushroom
fungi; (e) nitrogen metabolism in edible mushroom species.
Genetical and
molecular biological studies include: (a) isolation and
regulation of cellulase genes in the straw mushroom, V.
volvacea, and the oyster mushroom, Pleurotus; (b)
generation of molecular markers for construction of a genetic
map, and characterisation of genetic determinants of some
phenotypic traits in the Shiitake mushroom, Lentinula edodes;
(c) identification and molecular cloning of differentially
expressed genes involved in lignocellulose utilisation in L.
edodes; (d) identification and molecular cloning of
differentially expressed genes involved in fruit-body
development in L. edodes; (e) diversity-generating
mechanisms in V.volvacea
Other on-going
research which does not fall into these three major categories
includes: (a) the monitoring and analysis of staphylococcal
enterotoxins in V. volvacea; (b) zinc uptake and
distribution in selected mushroom fungi and the effects of
zinc on growth and fruit body development.
¡@
Since
1991 alone, mushroom-related research has attracted almost
US$850,000 in funding from sources which include the Hong Kong
Research Grants Council, the Croucher Foundation, United Nations
Industrial Development Organization, the British Council and
several industrial organisations.
The
Department of Biology at CUHK plays a major role in the training
of young scientists, especially those from developing countries,
in techniques related to mushroom biology and cultivation.
During the past 22 years, three Ph.D and eighteen M.Phil Degrees
have been conferred on Departmental graduate students working on
research projects involving mushrooms. Several workshops,
financially supported by the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the United
Nations Development Programme UNDP), and the International Cell
Research Organization (ICRO) have been held in the Department's
research laboratories and at the mushroom cultivation facility
located on the University campus.The University has also hosted
several international workshops and conferences wholly or partly
concerned with mushroom biology and/or cultivation.Through these
conferences, workshops and other meetings, CUHK has provided
occasions for the interaction of scientists and experts from
industrialised and developing countries, for younger scientists
to discuss their research activities with more experienced
scientists from different countries, and the opportunity for
scientists from different countries to develop collaborative
research programmes. The Department of Biology at CUHK is also
the Headquarters of the International Mushroom Society for the
Tropics. In 1991, when UNESCO approved the establishment of the
Hong Kong Microbial Resource Centre (MIRCEN) as the
twenty-fourth such centre among the global network of MIRCENs,
the Department of Biology was selected to be the headquarters.
The main theme of the Hong Kong MIRCEN's activities is
Bioconversion Technology which is highly compatible and
complementary with many of the Department's mushroom-related
research programmes especially those concerned with the
utilisation of lignocellulosic and other organic wastes and with
bioremediation. The University is also a major contributor to
the Global Network on Mushroom Research and Development
constituted by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations. Professor S.T.Chang is the Coordinator of the
Mushroom Germplasm Science Working Group, one of six such groups
established as part of the network.
¡@
In October
1993, the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO)
approved the allocation of funding to establish a Centre for
International Services to Mushroom Biotechnology (CISM BIOTECH)
on the campus of The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK). The
Centre is currently engaged in expanding a Mushroom
Biotechnology Database and Information Network (MUSHNET) for the
collection and dissemination of information relating to mushroom
production and mushroom biotechnology. This comprises published
literature relating to the subject areas, primary data available
from CUHK records and through the World Society for Mushroom
Biology and Mushroom Products, and other material available
through national databases, government reports and other sources
of a similar nature. A Mushroom Depository and Genebank for the
conservation of mushroom genetic resources is also located at
the Centre. The Centre will provide for technology transfer and
services to organisations in developing countries through
training courses, workshops and consultant activities, and
undertake research in many aspects of mushroom biology including
cultivation technology. genetics and biology of mushrooms,
bioconversion of agricultural wastes, mushroom products, and
processing and marketing. CISM BIOTECH will also interact with
regional and national nodes/resource centres worldwide in
providing the necessary technological back-up support for the
promotion of regional and national development of mushroom and
mushroom-related industries.
Two members
of The Chinese University of Hong Kong's Biology Department
(Professor S.T. Chang and Dr John Buswell), are also actively
involved (as Vice-President and Secretary/Treasurer,
respectively) in the administration of the World Society for
Mushroom Biology and Mushroom Products established in January
1994.
Some recent research papers published by Hong
Kong mycologists include:
Hyde, K.D., Vrijmoed, L.P. & Hodgkiss, I.J.
Tropical mycological research in Hong Kong. The Mycologist
9:35. (1995).
Sadaba, R.B., Vrijmoed, L.L.P., Jones, E.B.G.
& Hodgkiss, I.J. Observations on vertical distribution of fungi
associated with standing senescent Acanthus ilicifolius
stems at Mai Po Mangrove, Hong Kong. Hydrobiologia
295:119-126. (1995).
Hyde, K.D. & Lee, S.Y. Ecology of mangrove
fungi and their role in nutrient cycling: what gaps occur in our
knowledge? Hydrobiolgia 295:107-118. (1995).
Sadaba, R.B., Vrijmoed, L.L.P., Jones, E.B.G.
& Hodgkiss, I.J. Fungal succession and decomposition of exposed
Acanthus ilicifolius stems at Mai Po Mangrove, Hong
Kong. In Environmental Research in Pearl River and Coastal
Waters, eds. Wong, C.K., Chu, K.H., Chen, Q.C. & Ma, X.L.
Guangdong Higher Education Press, Guangzhou, PRC, 186. (1995).
Wang, H.X., Liu, W.K., Ng, T.B., Ooi, V.E.C.
& Chang, S.T. Immunomodulatory and antitumour activities of a
polysaccharide-peptide complex from a mycelial culture of
Tricholoma sp., a local edible mushroom. Life Sciences.
57:269-281. (1995a).
¡@
Wang, H.X., Liu, W.K., Ng, T.B., Ooi, V.E.C.
& Chang, S.T. Isolation and characterization of two distinct
lectins with antiproliferative activity from the cultured
mycelium of the edible mushroom Tricholoma mongolicum.
International Journal of Peptide and Protein Research.
46:508-513.(1995b).
Buswell, J.A., Cai, Y.J. & Chang, S.T.
Effect of nutrient nitrogen on manganese peroxidase and laccase
production by Lentinula (Lentinus) edodes. FEMS
Microbiology Letters. 128, 81-88.(1995)
INDIA
India has over 50 institutes and 150
universities where mycology-related studies are undertaken, and
some 300 activie mycologists. Annually, about 300 mycological
research papers are published both in Indian and foreign
journals.There are two mycological societies: the Mycological
Society of India which publishes the journal "Kavaka" (edited by
Prof. C.V. Subramanian), and the Indian Mycological Society
which publishes the Indian Journal of Mycology.
Centre for Advanced Studies in Mycology
and Plant Pathology, Madras University
¡@
The Centre, associated with the University's
Botany laboratories, is located on the Guindy campus and is one
of the important centres of mycology in India. Mycology became
a focus for attention at the Centre about 50 years ago under the
leadership of the eminent mycologist and plant pathologist,
Professor T.S. Sadasivan. The Centre's work on various aspects
of mycology was continued by Professor C.V. Subramanian, former
President of the IMA (1976-1983) and several of his pupils who,
either remained in Madras or spread the cause of Mycology to
other universities and institutes throughout India. The Centre
has become recognized for its work on different aspects of
ecology, biology and taxonomy of fungi, especially of the
Hyphomycetes and Ascomycetes, and today is an important centre
for work on the taxonomy of the Agaricales.
Department of Plant Pathology, Rajasthan
Agricultural University at Udaipur
Mycology forms an integral part of the
teaching and research activities of the Department of Plant
Pathology at the University. Mycology is taught at both
undergraduate (one course) and postgraduate (three M.Sc. and one
Ph.D courses) levels. In the past, research interests included
fungal physiology, taxonomy of plant pathogenic fungi
particularly rusts, and the powdery and downy mildews.
Currently, in addition to fungal ecology and taxonomy, the main
research interests are in the biological control of plant
pathogenic fungi (in collaboration with the university's own
Department of Biochemistry and with the Department of Biological
Sciences, University of Exeter, United Kingdom), race
identification in Colletotrichum (in collaboration with
the International Crop Research Institute of Semi-Arid Tropics
(ICRISAT), Hyderabad), and mushroom cultivation.
The Department of Plant Pathology, with assistance from over
100 plant pathologists working at a number of research
institutions and universities throughout Rajasthan, is also
actively engaged in the development of chemical treatments for
controlling both fungal and bacterial diseases. Moreover, it
provides training for Extension Officers employed by the
Department of Agriculture, Government of Rajasthan, operates a
plant disease identification service for the state's farmers,
and suggests appropriate measures to combat disease outbreaks.
During the last decade, a number of eminent mycologists from
overseas have visited the Department.
Culture Collection & Herbarium, ARI, New
Delhi
India has a national culture collection and
herbarium located at the Division of Mycology and Plant
Pathology, IARI, New Delhi which has been a centre for
mycologically-related activities for over 75 years. In addition,
a new Culture Collection Centre has been established recently
at Chandigarh with assistance from the Department of Science and
Technology, Government of India.
NEPAL
Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan
University, Kirtipur, Kathmandu, Nepal
Some recent publications emanating from this
Department are as follows:
Adhikari, M.K. Mycodiversity in Nepal: a
glimpse. Nahson Bulletin 3-4:4-6. (1995).
Adhikari, M.K. Toxic and medicinal mushrooms
from Nepal. Apinmap Scamap Network I:1-2.
(1995).
Budathoki, U. & Singh, P.N. Some new black
mildews from Kathmandu Valley. Indian Phytopathology
47:377-380. (1994).
Budathoki, U. & Singh, S.K. Three new species
of Pseudocarospora from the Nepal Himalaya. Myco. Res.
99:230-232. (1995).
Budathoki, U. & Singh S.K. A new dictyosporic
folicolous Hyphomycete from Kathmandu Valley (Nepal). Indian
Phytopath 48:1. (1995).
Manandhar, V. & Adhikari M.K. Lepiota
and its allied genera from Nepal II. Nahson Bulletin
1:2-3. (1995).
Manandhar, V. Rust on medicinal plant
Jasminum - a new report from Nepal. Apinmap Scamap
Network 1:3-4. (1995).
THAILAND
Culture Collections in Thailand containing
mycological specimens include those located at: (i) Thailand
Academic Agricultural Division of the Ministry of Agriculture
where various filamentous fungi (basidiomycetes) and mushroom
species are maintained, and (ii) Thailand
Microbiological Resources Centre (MIRCEN) which holds various
filamentous fungi and yeasts.
Some recent mycological
publications include: Puttikhunt, C., Pichyangkura, S. &
Kinoshita, S. Production of linamarase from the yeast
Hansenula anomala. 2nd Int. Sci Meeting Proceeding.
Cassava Biotech. Network (CIAT) II: 439-450. (1995).
¡@
Punnapayak, H. & Hoffman, J.J. Ansonia
spp. as potential fuel crops for arid lands. World. J.
Microbiol. Biotechnol. 73: 85-87.
Higher Degrees
Awarded in 1995/96
Higher degrees awarded within the IMA
Committee for Asia region during 1995/96 include:
Masters Degree:
KUO, Hon-Chi. (1996). Taxonomic study of
Uredinales on Cyperaceae of Taiwan. Dept. of Botany, National
University of Taiwan, Taipei.
MAN, Sulaiman bin. (1995). Taxonomy and
distribution of Hyphomycetes on decaying aerial parts of palms
in Malaysia. Department of Botany, University of Malaysia, Kuala
Lumpur.
MOI, Llew Gee. (1995). A taxonomic study of
litter-inhabiting dematiaceous Hyphomycetes in Malaysia.
Department of Botany, University of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur.
SEE, Loh Leh. (1995). Taxonomy and
distribution of Zygomycetes in Malaysia. Department of Botany,
University of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur.
PhD Degree:
BAI Feng-yan. (1995). The genus Candida
of China. Graduate School of Academia Sinica, Beijing,
China.
CHEN, Chee-Jen. (1995). Morphology and
molecular phylogenietic relationships on Tremella and
related genera (Tremellales, Heterobasidiomycetes) in Taiwan.
Department of Botany, National Taiwan University, Taipei,
Taiwan.
GUO, Cheng-liang. (1995). Phylogenetic
relationships of some Tilletia species in China based on
ribosomal DNA RFLPs analyses. Northeast Forestry University,
Harbin, China.
WANG, Qi. (1995). Systematic studies on the
Trichiales (Myxomycetes) from China. Shenyang Agricultural
University/Jilin Agricultural University, Changchun, China.
WANG, Tien-Cheng. (1995). Cultural behavior
of Pseudocercospora fuligena, the cause of tomato black
leaf mold, and host resistance. Department of Plant Pathology,
National Chung-Hsin University, Taichung, Taiwan.
New
Fungi Recorded in 1995
China
Ascochyta araliae
J.D. Sun & J.K. Bai, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:107.
(1995). On Aralia elata (Miq.) Semm. Type: MHSAU 1977 in
Shenyang Agricultural University.
Ascochyta
macckiae J.D. Sun & J.K. Bai,
Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:109. (1995). On Macckia
amurensis Rupr. & Maxim. Type: MHSAU 1978, Shenyang
Agricultural University.
Ascochyta
nicandrae J.D. Sun & J.K. Bai,
Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:110. (1995). On Nicandra
physaloides Gaerth. Type: MHSAU 1975, Shenyang Agricultural
University.
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Ascochyta zanthoxyli
J.D. Sun & J.K. Bai, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:111.
(1995). On Zanthoxylum planispinum Sieb. & Zucc. Type:
MHSAU 1251, Shenyang Agricultural University.
Asteridiella gaylussaciae
Hansf. var. craibiodendri G.Z. Jiang, Acta Mycol. Sin.
14:5. (1995). On Craibiodendron stellatum
(Pierre) Smith. Type: HMAS 45733, Beijing.
Asterina aquilariae
Y.S. Ouyang & B. Song, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:242.
(1995). On Aquilaria sinensis (Lour.) Gilg. Type: GDIM
78141, Guangdong Institute of Microbiology, Guangzhou.
Asterina garciniicola
Y.S. Ouyang & B. Song, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:244.
(1995). On Garcinia multiflora Champ. Type: GDIM 92032,
Guangdong Institute of Microbiology, Guangzhou.
Coleosporium synuricola
Y. Xue & L.P. Shao, Acta Mycol. Sin.
14:248. (1995). On Synurus deltoides Nakai.
Type: Y. Xue 93001 (holotype in Northwest Forestry University,
isotype in HMAS).
Eurotium aridicola
H.Z. Kong & Z.T. Qi, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:87.
(1995). Isolated from animal dung in Tibet. Type: HMAS 62768;
living culture AS 3.4673 (Institute of Microbiology, Academia
Sinica, Beijing).
Eurotium costiforme
H.Z. Kong & Z.T. Qi, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:10.
(1995). (Anam.: Aspergillus costiformis Kong & Qi).
Isolated from moldy paper-box, Hebei. Type: HMAS 62766; living
culture AS 3.4664.
Eurotium fimicola
H.Z. Kong & Z.T. Qi, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:86. (1995). (Anam.:
Aspergillus fimicola Kong & Qi). Isolated from animal
dung in Tibet. Type: HMAS 62769; living culture AS 3.4674.
Eurotium parviverruculosum
H.Z. Kong & Z.T. Qi, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:12.
(1995). (Anam.: Aspergillus parviverruculosus Kong & Qi).
Isolated from soil, Hebei. Type: HMAS 62767; Living culture AS
3.4665.
Ganoderma renii
S.C. He, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:104. (1995). Type:
H1495 (HMBAG, Academia Guizhouensis, Guiyang).
Ganoderma zhenningense
S.C. He, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:24. (1995). Type:
H1425 (HMBAG, Academia Guizhouensis, Guiyang).
Lobaria yulongensis
J.B. Chen, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:261. (1995). Type:
Ahti, Chen & Wang no.46339 (HMAS) (lichen).
Lophodermium confluens
Y.R. Lin, C.L. Hou & W.F. Zheng, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:93.
(1995). On Pinus armandi Franch. Type: ACAFP 67307 (Anhui
Agricultural University, Hefei).
Lophodermium harbinense
Y.R. Lin, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:179.
(1995). On Juniperus sibirica Burgsd. Type: ACAFP 67037.
Marssonina zanthoxyli
Y.J. Lu & G.L. Li, Acta Mycol. Sin.
14:184. (1995). On Zanthoxylum bungeanum Maxim.
Type: Lu & Yang 911021 (Shandong Agricultural University, Taian).
Meliola lianchangensis
G.Z. Jiang, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:2. (1995). On
Dioscorea scortechinii Br. & Burk. var. parviflora Br. &
Burk. Type: HMAS 24303.
Meliola mitragynicola
Dieght. var. wendlandiicola G.Z. Jiang,
Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:3. (1995). On Wendlandia
tinctoria DC. Type: HMAS 44486.
Microsphaera exochordae Q.X. Lu &
G.Z. Lu, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:172. (1995). On
Exochorda serratifolia Moore. Type: HMSAU 1992 (Shenyang
Agircultural University, Shengyang).
Oudemansiella fanjingshanensis
M.Zang & X.L. Wu, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:50.
(1995). Type: HKAS 39316 (Kunming Institute of Botany, Academia
Sinica, Kunming).
Phallus megacephalus
M. Zang, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:251. (1995).
Type: HKAS 28176.
Phyllosticta chaenomelesicola
L. Yu & J.K. Bai, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:192.
(1995). On Chaenomeles speciosa Nakai. Type: HMSAU 1981
(Shenyang Agricualtural University, Shenyang).
Phyllosticta convallaricola
L. Yu & J.K. Bai, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:193.
(1995). On Convallaria keisei Miq. Type: HMSAU 995.
Plasmopara sanguisorbae
C.J. Li, Z.Q. Yuan & Z.Y. Zhao, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:161.
(1995). On Sanguisorba officinalis L. Type: HMAAC 001210
(Xinjiang Agricultural University, Urumqi).
Ploioderma destruens
Y.R. Lin & C.L. Hou, Acta Mycol. Sin.
(1995). On Cunninghamia lanceolata Hook. Type: ACAFP
67485 (Anhui Agricultural University, Hefei).
Sclerotinia ginseng
C.R. Wang, C.F. Chen & J. Chen, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:187.
(1995). On Panax ginseng C.A. Mey. Type: HMSAU 800719 (Shenyang
Agricultural University, Shenyang).
Sinoboletus guizhouensis
M. Zang & X.L. Wu, Acta Mycol. Sin. 14:251.
(1995). Type: HKAS 29186 (Kunming Institute of Botany, Academia
Sinica, Kunming).
Hong Kong
Dept. of Ecology & Biodiversity,
University of Hong Kong
The genus Phyllachora from
Australia. Observations on P. pseudostromatica, P.
Melaleucae and P. shivasia sp. nov. from the host
Melaleuca. Pearce, C.A. & Hyde, K.D. Mycological
Research 99:1253-1260 (1995).
The genus Massarina, with a
description of M. eburnea and an annotated list of
Massarina names. Hyde, K.D. Mycological Research
99:291-296 (1995).
Checklist of plant diseases of the Western
Province of Papua New Guinea. Hyde, K.D. & Philemon, E.
Australian Plant Pathology 23:69-76. (1995).
Guignardia candeloflamma
sp. nov. causing leaf spots of Pinanga sp. Fröhlich, J. &
Hyde, K.D. Mycological Research 99:110-112.
(1995).
Fungi from palms. XIX. Appendicospora
coryphae, a new name for Apiosporella coryphae.
Hyde, K.D. Sydowia 47:223-229. (1995).
The genus Phyllachora from Australia:
and two new species; P. victoriensis and P. hakeaicola
from Hakea. Pearce, C.A. & Hyde, K.D. Mycological
Research 99:1261-1267. (1995).
Astrosphaeriella fronsicola
sp. nov. associated with leaf spots on Oraniospsis and
other palms. Fröhlich, J. & Hyde, K.D. Mycological Research
99:453-459. (1995).
Maculatipalma frondicola
gen. et sp. nov. causing leaf spots on palms in north Queensland
with descriptions of related genera; Apioplagiostoma and
Plagiostoma. Fröhlich, J. & Hyde, K.D. Mycological
Research 99:727-734. (1995).
Fungi from palms. XVIII. The Genus
Anthostomella, with ten new species. Hyde, K.D.
Nova Hedwigia. (1995). In press.
Mycospharerella palmicola
associated with leaf spots of Cocos nucifera in
Australia, Irian Jaya and Papua New Guinea. Hyde, K.D. &
Fröhlich, J. Mycological Research 99:704-706.
(1995).
Tropical Australian Freshwater Fungi. IX.
Vaginatispora aquatica gen. et sp. nov. Hyde, K.D.
Nova Hedwigia 61:233-241. (1995).
The genus Phyllachora from Australia.
Phyllachora sagerettiae sp. nov. from Sageretia hamosa.
Pearce, C.A., Hyde, K.D. & Shivas, R.G. Mycological
Research 99:554-556.(1995).
Tropical Australia freshwater fungi.VII. New
genera and species of ascomycetes. Hyde, K.D. Nova Hedwigia
61:119-140. (1995).
Fungi from rachides of Livistona in
the Western Province of Papua New Guinea. Hyde, K.D.
Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 116:315-324.
(1995).
Fungi from palms. XVII. The genus
Fasciatispora, with notes on Amphisphaerella. Hyde,
K.D. Nova Hedwigia 61:249-268. (1995).
Fungi from palms. XV. Sabalicola
gen. nov., and a new combination for Anthostomella
sabalensioides. Hyde, K.D. Nova Hedwigia 60:595-598.
(1995).
Fungi from palms. XVI. Cocoicola
gen. nov. Hyde, K.D. Nova Hedwigia 60:599-604.
(1995).
Fungi from Palms. XXI. The genus Seynesia.
Hyde, K.D. Sydowia 47:199-212. (1995).
Two new interesting ascomycetes from Irian
Jaya and Papua New Guinea. Hyde, K.D. Mycotaxon 55:275-282.
(1995).
Tropical Australian Freshwater Fungi. VIII.
Bertia convolutispora sp. nov. Hyde, K.D. Nova
Hedwigia 61:141-146. (1995).
Fungi from palms. XX. Caudatispora
palmicola gen. et sp. nov. from in Ecuador. Hyde, K.D. &
Fröhlich, J. Sydowia 47:230-235. (1995).
Lophiosphaera asiana
sp. nov. from Thailand mangroves. Hyde, K.D. Mycotaxon
55:283-288. (1995).
Eutypella naqsii
sp. nov. from interitidal Avicennia. Hyde, K.D.
Mycological Research 99:1462-1464. (1995).
Fungi from palms.XX.The genus Guignardia.
Hyde, K.D. Sydowia. 47:180-198. (1995).
Fungi from palms. XXIII. Rachidicola
gen et sp. nov. Hyde, K.D. & Fröhlich, J. Sydowia
47:217-222. (1995).
Fungi from palms XXIV. Ascotaiwania
palmicola sp. nov. from palms in Ecuador. Hyde, K.D.
Sydowia 47:213-215. (1995).
Stiblella holoboluva
sp. nov. from the Philippines. Seifert, K., Stanley, S. & Hyde,
K.D. Sydowia 47:258-263. (1995).
Nepal
In the year 1994-95 about 40 species of
mushroom and other plant parasitic fungi have been collected
from different areas (e.g. Kathmandu Valley, Jumla, Mustang,
Pokhara), identified and preserved. These included six species
of Lepiota, one species of Aecidium and one
species of Sporosorium which are reported as new to
Nepal.
Taiwan
Acantharia chaetomoides; Antostomella
rostrospora; A. taiwanensis; Bertia biseptata;
Gnomonia lithoccarpicola;
Gnomoniella lithocarpicola; Micropeltis symploci;
Rosenscheldiella perseae; Schizothyrium millettiae;
Tubeufia sentosa. Hsieh, W.H., C.Y. Chen and A.
Sivanesan. Taiwan fungi: new species and new records of
ascomycetes. Mycol. Res. 99: 917-931. (1995).
Antrodia cinnamomea.
Chang, T.T. and W.N. Chou. Antrodia cinnamomea sp. nov.
on Cinnamomum kanehirai in Taiwan. Mycol. Res.
99:756-758. (1995).
Ardhachandra prolatofusiformis.
Chen, J.L. and S.S. Tzean.A new species of Ardhachandra
from Taiwan. Mycol. Res. 99: 364-366. (1995).
Aspergillus taichungensis.
Yaguchi, T., A. Someya and S. Udagawa.
Aspergillus taichungensis, a new species from Taiwan.
Mycoscience 36: 421-424. (1995).
Chaetosphaeria capitata; *Pseudofuscophialis
lignicola. Sivanesan, A. and H.S.
Chang. Pseudofuscophialis lignicola gen.et sp. nov. and
Chaetosphaeria capitata sp. nov. from wood in Taiwan.
Mycol. Res. 99: 711-716. (1995).
Entrophospora kentinensis;
Glomus chimonobambusae. Wu, C.G., Y.S. Liu, Y.L. Hwuang,
Y.P. Wang and C.C. Chao. Glomales of Taiwan: V. Glomus
chimonobambusae and Entrophospora kentinensis, spp.
nov. Mycotaxon 53: 283-294. (1995).
Halosarpheia aquadulcis.
Hsieh, S.Y., H.S. Chang, E.B.G. Jones, S.J.
Read and S.T. Moss. Halosarpheia aquadulcis sp. nov., a
new lignicolous, freshwater ascomycetes from Taiwan. Mycol.
Res. 99: 49-53. (1995).
*Pareutypella nematoceras; P. sulcata.
Yu, Y.M. and J.D. Rogers. Pareutypella gen. nov. for two
long-ostiolate pyrenomycetes from Taiwan. Mycologia
87: 891-895. (1995).
Phellinus eugeniae.
Chang, T.T. Phellinus eugeniae sp. nov. on Eugenia
jambus in Taiwan. Mycol. Res. 99: 1527-1528.
(1995).
**Laboulbenia exigua
Thaxter var. melanolabiata Terada. Terada, K.
Laboulbenia exigua and related taxa (Ascomycetes,
Laboulbeniales). Mycoscience 36: 293-309.
(1995).
**Pleurotus cystidiosus
var. formosensis J.M. Moncalva. Moncalva, J.M.
Pleurotus cystidiosus var. formosensis var. nov.: an unusual
Pleurotus collection of subgenus Coremiopleurotus
from Taiwan. Mycol. Res. 99:1479-1482. 1995.
New records:
Allochytridium expandens
Salkin; Catenochytrium carolinianum Berdan;
Chytriomyces hyalinus Karling; Entophlyctis
confervae-glomeratae (Cienkowski)Sparrow; Rhizophlyctis
variabilis Karling; R. mastigotrichis (Nowak.)
Foscher; Rhizophydium chaetiferum Sparrow; R.
haynaldii (Schaarschmidt) Fischer; R. laterale
(Braun) Rabenhorst. Chen, S.F. and C.Y. Chien. Some chytrids
of Taiwan (I). Bot. Bull. Acad. Sin. 36: 235-241
(1995).
Amanita hemibapha
(Berk. & Br.) Sacc. subsp. similis (Bored.) Corner &
Bas.; A. rufoferruginea Hongo; A. vaginata var.
puncata (Cleland & Cgeel) Gulb.; A. virosa (Fr.)
Bertillon; Baeospora mycosura (Fr.:Fr.) Sing.;
Boletus violaceofuscus Chiu; Camarophyllus virgineus
(Wulf:Fr.) Kummer; Clavicorona pyxidata (Pers.:Fr.) Doty
Clavulina cinerea (Bull.:Fr.) Schroet; Clavulinopsis
miyabeana (S.Ito) S.Ito; Copelandia cyanescens
(Berk. & Br.) Sing.; Coltricia cinnamomea (Pers.) Murr.;
Cordyceps submilitarius Henn.; Crepidotus
badiofloccosus Imai; Cyptotrama asprata (Berk.)
Redhead & Ginns; Gomphidius maculatus (Scop.) Fr.;
Gomphus floccosus (Schw.) Sing.; Gyromitra esculenta
(Pers.) Fr.; Hygrocybe psittacina (Schaeff. :Fr.)
Wunsche; Inocybe calamistrata (Fr.:Fr.) Gull.;
Laccaria ohiensis (Mont.) Sing.; L. vinaceoavellanea
Hongo; Lactarius castanopsidis Hongo; L.
controversus (Pers.:Fr.) Fr.; L. gerardii Peck;
L. laeticolorus (Imai) Imazeki; L. lignyotus Fr.
var. marginatus (Smith & Hesler) Hesler & Smith; L.
subvellereus Peck; Lepiota cinnamomea Hongo;
Leucocoprinus birnbaumii (Corda) Sing.; Oligoporus
caesius (Scharad.: Fr.) Gilbn. & Ryv.; Panus fulves
(Berk.) Pegler & Rayner; Phaeolepiota aurea (Matt.:
Fr.) Maire; Phellinus hartigii (Allesch. & Schnabl.)
Imaz; Pluteus leoninus (Schaeff: Fr.) Kummer ; P.
petasatus (Fr.) Gillet; Pseudocolus fusiformis
Lloyd; Pycnoporus coccineus (Fr.) Bond. & Sing.;
Rhizina undulata Fr. ; Russula compacta Forst &
Peck apud Peck; R. mariae Peck; Strobilomyces
seminudus Hongo; Strobilurus stephanocystis (Hora)
Sing.; Stropharia rugosoannulata Farlow; Suillus
subluteus (Peck) Snell; Tylopilus porphyrosporus
(Fr.) A.H. Smith & Thiers; T. virens (Chiu) Hongo;
Volvariella subtaylori Hongo. Chen, C.M. and H.W. Huang.
Survey of wild mushrooms in Nantou county. in "The Biological
Resources of Nantou county: A Preliminary Bioinventory Report"
p.239-254. Taiwan Endemic Species Research Institute. (1995).
Antrodiella
cf. romelii (Donk) Niemela; Asterostroma musciola
(Berk. & Curt.) Massee; Brevicellicium olivascens (Bres.)
Larss. & Hjortst; Ceriporia viridans (Berk. & Br.) Donk;
Ceriporiopsis cf. mucida (Pers:Fr.) Gilbn.;
Lopharia cinerascens (Schw.) G.H. Cunn.; Oxyporus
cuneatus (Murr.) Aoshima; Plicatura crispa (Pers.:Fr.)
Rea ; Rigidoporus vincta (Berk.) Ryv.; Sistotrema
brinkmannii (Bres.) John Erikss.; Skeletocutis
alborcremea A. David; Steccherinum robustius (John
Erikss. & Lund.) John Erikss. Wu, S.H. Twelve species of the
Aphyllophorales new to Taiwan. Fung. Sci. 10:
9-22. (1995).
Circinella musae
(Sorokine) Berlese & de Toni. Ho, H.M. Notes on two coprophilous
species of the genus Circinella (Mucorales) from Taiwan.
Fung. Sci. 10: 29-32 (1995).
Dichopleuropus spathulatus
Reid Elmerina cladophora (Berk.) Bres.; Gyrodontium
versicolor (Berk. & Br.) Mass G.; Thelephora fuscella
(Cesati) Lloyd. Wu, S.H. and W.N. Chou. Four basidiomycotina new
to Taiwan. Bull. Nat. Mus. Nat. Sci. 6: 139-146
(1995).
Didymium lenticulare
Thind & Lakhanpal. Chung, C.H. and C.H. Liu. Didymium
lenticulare Thind & Lakhanpal (Physarales, Myxomycetes) -
New to Taiwan. Taiwania 40: 375-380 (1995).
Dimerella epiphylla
(Muell. Arg.) Mulme. Chung, C.H. Notes on some folicolous
lichenized fungi from Taiwan. Tawania.
1-156 (1995).
Humicola insolens
var. thermoidea (Cooney & Emerson) Ellis;
Myceliophthora fergusii (Klopotek)van Oorschot; M.
hinnulea Awao & Udagawa. Chen, K.Y. and Z.C. Chen. Three
new records of thermophilic fungi from Taiwan. Taiwania
40: 129-138 (1995).
Leucothecium coprophilum
Vulldosera & Guarro. Yaguchi, T., A. Someya and S. Udagawa. Two
interesting cleistothecial Ascomycetes from soils.
Mycoscience 36: 151-154 (1995a).
Stemonitis axifera
var. smithii (Macbride) Hagelstein; S. herbatica
Peck. Chung, Ch.H. and C.H. Liu.First report of fimicolous
Myxomycetes from Taiwan. Fung. Sci. 10: 33-35
(1995).
* New genus
** New varieties
Recent
Mycological Book Publications
ADVANCE OF SOYBEAN RUST RESEARCH (1994)
Edited by Science and Technology Division,
Agriculture Ministry, P.R. China & Oil Crops Research Institute,
Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. Hubei Science and
Technology Publishing House. 173 pp (in Chinese). ISBN
7-5352-1643-9/S.151. US$1.20 (approx).
ECONOMIC MARCOFUNGI FROM SOUTHWESTERN CHINA
(1994)
¡@
Edited by Ying Jian-zhe & Zang Mu. Science
Press, Beijing 399 pp (in Chinese) ISBN7-03-004075 9/S.125.
US$5.00 (approx).
THE ECONOMIC MACROMYCETES FROM WESTERN SICHUAN
(1994)
by Ying Jian-zhe, Wen Hua-an & Zong Yi-chen.
Science Press, Beijing. 137 pp (in Chinese). ISBN7-03-004073
2/Q.490. US$2.50. (approx).
MACROFUNGAL FLORA OF GANZI REGION (1994)
by Dai Xiang-cai & Li Tai-hui. Sichuan Science
& Technology Publishing House, Chengdu 330 pp (in Chinese)
ISBN7-5364-2727 3/S.489. US$3.00
CULTIVATION OF LENTINUS EDODES IN CHINA
(1994)
Edited by Huang Nian-lai. Shanghai Science &
Technology Press, Shanghai. 477 pp (in Chinese). ISBN
7-5439-0677-5/S.068. US$4.50 (approx).
RECENT RESEARCH ACHIEVEMENTS OF YOUNG
MYCOLOGISTS IN CHINA
Edited by Tan Wan-zhong. (1995). Southwest
Normal University Press, Chongqing. 213 pp (in Chinese). ISBN
7-5621-1309-2/Q.9. US$3.00 (approx).
MYCOSYSTEMA MONOGRAPHICUM SERIES NO.2. THE
GENUS PSEUDOCERCOSPORA IN CHINA (1995).
by GuoYing-lan & Hsieh Wen-hsui. International
Academic Publisher, Beijing. 388pp.ISBN 7-80003-331-7/Q.23. USD$
70.00
FAUNA AND FLORA OF THE MT. NAMJAGBARWA REGION
(1995).
Edited by Li Bo-sheng, Mao Xiao-lan & Wang
Zong-yi. Science Press, Beijing. 315 pp (in Chinese). ISBN
7-03-004553-X/Q.564. US$4.50 (approx)
HONG KONG MUSHROOMS (1995).
by Chang Shu-ting & Mao Xiao-lan. The Chinese
University Press, Hong Kong
470 pp (in Chinese) ISBN 962-201-626-X.
US$50.00.
ULTRASTRUCTURE OF PLANT PATHOGENIC FUNGI
(1995)
by Kang Zhen-sheng. China Science & Technology
Press. 92 pp, 108 pl (in Chinese)
ISBN 7-5046-2174 9/Q.80. US$5.50 (approx).
MACROFUNGAL FLORA OF GUANGDONG PROVINCE
¡@
________________________________________________________________
IMA Committee for
Asia
NEWSLETTER
Issue No. 2.
July, 1998
Directory of Asian
Systematic Mycologists
Professor Z.C. Chen,
Chairman of IMACA has commissioned Dr Tricita Quimio to prepare
a Directory of Asian Systematic Mycologists. The Directory,
which identifies and provides information on the activities of
mycologists working in universities, government laboratories,
private companies, or other centres located within IMACA's
sphere of operation, is currently being compiled. Currently,
some 200 mycologists from Bangladesh, Mainland China, Hong Kong
SAR, India, Indonesia, Iran, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines,
Russia, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand and
Vietnam are listed. The purpose of this important initiative is
to provide for better communication between mycologists from
different countries within the region, and to promote greater
interaction and cooperation. Its success will depend on the
participation of our readers who are encouraged to register. If
you would like to be included in the first edition of the
Directory, please contact Dr Quimio without delay at the
Department of Plant Pathology, University of the Philippines at
Los Banos, College, Laguna, Philippines, FAX 63 94 9363551 or by
e-mail at: thq@mudspring.uplb.edu.ph for further information.
¡@
Profiles of Committee
Members
Dr. Kyung-Hee MIN (Republic
of Korea)
Dr. Kyung-Hee Min
is currently the Head of the Department of Biology
at Sookmyung Women's University in
Seoul. He received his B.Sc. and M.S. from Seoul
National University. After obtaining his Ph.D. from the
University of Tsukuba in Japan, he joined the Faculty of
Sookmyung Women's University in 1976 as Assistant Professor in
the Department of Biology. Since returning to the Republic of
Korea in early 1975, he has introduced several mycology courses
at his university. His early research involved the
identification of imperfect fungi at Sookmyung Women's
University and, as a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for
Fermentation, Osaka, he worked on the identification and ecology
of hyphomycete fungi in paddy fields. He later conducted a
physiological and biochemical study on Cryptococcus
neoformans while working as a Postdoctoral Fellow in the
Clinical Mycology Section of the National Institute of Health,
Bethesda, U.S.A. After his return to Korea in 1983, he has been
involved in the identification of mushrooms for mycological
courses. Aside from taxonomy, Dr. Min is also engaged in
research on the molecular genetics of Neurospora crassa,
and phylogenetic relationships of the genus Pleurotus
using allozyme and RAPD analyses. His current research interests
focus on the systematics of hyphomycete fungi and fungal
molecular genetics. Dr Min is a former President of the
Mycological Society of Korea and a committee member of the
International Mycological Association for Asia. He has
published over 40 scientific papers and has undertaken numerous
academic visits to universities and research institutes in
Japan, Europe and the United States.
Dr.
Larissa N. VASSILYEVA (Russia)
Dr. Larissa
N. Vassilyeva is a leading scientist at the Institute of Biology
and Soil Science, Far East Branch of the Russian Academy
of Sciences (Vladivostok). After graduating from Leningrad
University in 1972, she began to study microscopic fungi of the
Russian Far East and completed her PhD thesis (1979) entitled "Micromycetes
of Kolyma High Lands (Magadan Region)". Later, she focused on
pyrenomycetes and their system elaboration and, in 1992, was
awarded the degree of Doctor of Sciences at Saint-Petersburg for
her thesis "Pyrenomycetes of the Russian Far East." She has
published over 80 papers and written several books including "Pyrenomycetes
and Loculoascomycetes of the Northern Far East" (1987), "Systematics
in Mycology" (1990), "Platonism in Systematics" (1992), and
"System of Pyrenomycetes" (1994). She has described overt 50
new species and 5 new genera, and has proposed overt 80 new
combinations during a revision of the pyrenomycetous system.
Her latest work, "Pyrenomycetous Fungi of the Russian Far East",
comprising about 700 species, will be published in near future.
Dr. Teck Koon
TAN (Singapore)
Dr Teck Koon
Tan is Associate Professor in the Department of
Biological Sciences of the National University of Singapore.
After graduating from the former University of Singapore and
then going on to successfully complete a Ph.D degree programme,
he joined the staff of the Department of Botany (now part of the
Department of Biological Sciences) in 1981. He teaches
undergraduate degree courses in general mycology, fungal
biodiversity and fungal aspects of plant pathology, mycological
components of a postgraduate degree course on plant biology, and
has supervised numerous M.Sc. and Ph.D students. His major
research interests include marine fungi, fungal airspora, and
fungal plant interactions. Current research projects include
studies on Halophytophthora, tropical aerobiology and
fungal allergens, Pseudocercospora-host interactions,
Rhizoctonia-orchid symbiosis, and fungal chitosan. He also
undertakes consultancy work involving fungal biodeterioration of
consumer products and fungal growth on/in buildings. Dr Tan has
been one of the two Secretaries to IMACA since 1990.
Dr. Amulya Bikash BASAK (Bangladesh)
Dr. Amulya Bikash Basak isa professor in the
Department of Botany of the University of Chittagong. He
received his B.Sc, M.Sc. and Ph.D degrees from the same
Department and University in 1975, 1976 and 1994, respectively.
His M.Sc. thesis was entitled "Detection of seed-borne fungal
pathogens from rough rice grains and their control measure" and
his Ph.D thesis was entitled, "Studies on fungal fruit rot
diseases of chilli (Capsicum annuum L.) occurring in
Chittagong district." In 1995, he undertook a one month period
of postdoctoral research training at the Central Arid Zone
Research Institute (CAZRI) in Jodhpur, India. Professor Basak
has been involved in the identification of Fungi Imperfecti from
leaves, stems and seeds of several important crops grown in
Bangladesh and from soils used to grow these crops. He has
recorded new fungal species from different hosts such as chilli,
brinjal, sunflower, bean, ponyal (Calophylum enophylum
Linn.) and jackfruit. Aside from taxonomy, Dr. Basak is also
engaged in research on the detection of seed-borne fungal
pathogens of different crops, histopathological characters of
fungi, and their transmission from seed to seedling. He has
taught Mycology and Plant Pathology since 1979, and has
supervised eight M.Sc. students. He has published over 33
scientific papers and, in 1989, his book entitled "Crop Diseases
And Control", written in Bengali, was published by the
Bangladesh Academy of Rural Development (BARD).
Professor Chiu-yuan
CHIEN (Taiwan)
Professor Chien is the Director of the
Mycology Laboratory at the National Taiwan Normal University. He
received a B.S. degree in Botany from the National Taiwan
University in 1959 and remained there as a Teaching Assistant
until 1964. He then moved to Tokyo University of Education where
he was awarded an M.Phil. in 1966 and a Ph.D in 1969, and then
spent two years as a Research Associate in the Department of Plant
Pathology at the University of Georgia in Athens before returning
to the National Taiwan Normal University. His research interests
include fungal systematics with emphasis on the Mucorales, and the
conservation of fungal cultures. He is a Member of the Mycological
Society of America, the Mycological Society of Japan, and of both
the Mycological Society and the Botanical Society of the Republic
of China. He is also one of the two secretaries of IMACA.
Introduction
to Asian Mycological Institutions
¡@
RUSSIA
Laboratory of Lower Plants, Institute of
Biology and Soil Science, Far East Branch of the Russian Academy
of Sciences, Vladivostok, Russia.
The Laboratory of Lower Plants was organized in
1949 by Dr. Lyubov Vassilyeva, a specialist on mushrooms. Two
editions of her book "Edible and Poisonous Fungi of the Far East"
are popular publications. Dr Vassilyeva was well-versed in many
groups of lower plants and trained specialists not only in
mycology (Drs. Zinaida Azbukuna, Irina Bunkuna, Margarita Nazarova,
Eugenia Bulakh), but also lichenology (Dr. Lyudmila Knyazheva),
algology (Dr. Lyudmila Kukharenko), and bryology (Dr. Valentina
Cherdantseva). Her former students now work at the Far East State
University and in the Laboratory of Lower Plants.
At present, mycologists predominate in the
Laboratory. The Head of the Laboratory is Dr. Lina Egorova who
studies Hyphomycetes and is the author of the monograph "Soil
Fungi of Far East - Hyphomycetes" (1986) which includes 553
species. At present, she is working on fungi of the family
Moniliaceae, treating them for the volume devoted to Hyphomycetes
in the series "Lower Plants, Fungi and Mosses of the Russian Far
East". As a result of her investigations, some species were
reported in the region for the first time. Most of these new
species were found in the Kamchatka Peninsula and include
Ramularia alnicola Cooke, R.canadensis Ellis et Everh., R.
graminella (Hoehn.) U. Braun, R. lonicerae Vogl. She also
described economically important hyphomycetous fungi such as
Sarocladium oryzae (Sawada) W. Gams et D. Hawksw. which causes
a decay of leaf vagina in rice plants, and Sesquicillium
candelabrum (Bonord.) W. Gams. which attacks the roots
of coniferous seedlings.
The previous Head of the Laboratory, Dr.
Zinaida Azbukina, is a specialist on the Uredinales and
Ustilaginales, and author of the monographs "Rust Fungi of Far
East" (1974) and "The Manual of Rust Fungi of Soviet Far East"
(1984). She identified 506 species from this region. In 1995,
this information was extended when she participated in a joint
project with Drs Y. Ono, M. Kakishina and S. Kaneko of Japan.
They described the interesting rust fungus Triphragmiopsis
laricinum (Chou) Tai on Larix, known previously only from
China and Korea. Cerothelium tanakae S. Ito was found on
Falcata japonica (Oliv.) Kom. for the first time in
Russia. Moreover, they discovered a new species Coleosporium
synuri (Azb.) on Synurus deltoides (Ait.) Nakari.
Previously, this fungus was reported only in uredinia in Japan,
China and Korea. At present she is the scientific editor of a
series of monographs "The Lower Plants, Fungi and Mosses of the
Russian Far East", three volumes of which have already been
published.
¡@
The third Doctor of Sciences in the
Laboratory is Larissa Nikolaevna Vasilyeva who represents Russia
on the IMA Committee for Asia. She is engaged in research on
pyrenomycetous fungi and has published several monographs
including "Pyrenomycetes and Loculoascomycetes of the Northern
Far East" ,"Systematics in Mycology" and "Systematics of
Pyrenomycetes". The former is the fourth volume in the series
"Lower Plants, Fungi and Mosses of the Russian Far East" which
contains about 700 species of which 27 are newly described. She
would be pleased to hear from pyrenomycetologists within Asia
who are interested in joint projects aimed at producing an
inventory of the above mentioned fungi in Asiatic countries and
in the publication of a monograph series.
¡@
Dr. Margarita Nazarova is a specialist on
mushrooms, mostly Boletaceae. She worked in the
Laboratory previously, and is now the only university teacher
among mycologists in the Russian Far East. Due to her efforts
and enthusiasm, and her ability to stimulate students interest
in fungi, lichens, and algae, the Laboratory is continually
reinforced with young workers. One of her recent wards is now a
post-graduate student and studies fungi as indicators of
environmental conditions. The aphyllophorous fungi of the
reserve "Kedrovaya Pad" are the subject of a graduate programme
supervised by Dr Nazarova.
¡@
Dr. Eugenia Bulakh specialises in the
Agaricales. She was responsible for the section on
Russulaceae in the first volume of the series "Lower Plants,
Fungi and Mosses of the Russian Far East" published in 1990. She
is continuing her investigations with emphasis on the
Tricholomataceae, 13 species of which were found in the
Russian Far East for the first time. These include such
interesting species as Marasmius aurantio-ferrugineus Hongo
known previously only from Japan, and Mycena lamprospora
(Corner) Korak, which occurs on some islands of North
Pacific. In her revision of earlier findings of
tricholomataceous fungi in our region, she discovered that the
name Marasmiellus vaillantii (Fr.) Sing. has a priority
over Marasmius dryophyllus L. Vass. described by the late
Lubov Nikolaevna Vasilyeva.
Dr. Olga Govorova is an expert on the
Ustilaginales, Auriculariales, Tremellales and Dacrymycetales, and
the author of the monograph "Smut Fungi of the Soviet Far East"
(1990) in which 299 smut species are described. Her treatment of
the Ustilaginales in our region, in collaboration with Drs I.V.
Karatygin (St. Petersburg) and Z.M. Azbukina, was also published
in the third volume of "Lower Plants, Fungi and Mosses of the
Russian Far East". At present, she is researching some orders of
heterobasidiomycetous fungi, and her new findings would be of
special interest to Asiatic mycologists. For example, she
discovered in the Russian Far East for the first time such species
as Auricularia minor Kobayasi and Exidia uvapassa
Lloyd, previously known only from Japan, as well as Calocera
sinensis McNabb and Tremella aurantialba Bandoni et
Zang reported only in China.
Dr. Alexander Mikulin is a lichenologist and
author of "The Guide for Identification of Lichens of Kamchatka
Peninsula" (1990). He also participated in the preparation of the
book "Macrolichens of the Pacific Northwest" in cooperation with
colleagues from Oregon State University.
Anna Bogacheva is a post-graduate student.
She graduated from Far East State University where she displayed
an interest in discomycetous fungi and joined mycologists of the
Laboratory of Lower Plants in field work. She is currently working
on the identification of discomycetes, and her efforts are
contributing to our knowledge of fungi in the Russian Far East.
Thus, her studies have extended the distribution range for such
endemic species as Sarcoscypha vassilievii Raitv. and
Albotricha kurilensis Raitv., as well as described
Sclerotinia mali Takachosi which was previously reported only
in Japan. Now she is now writing her Ph.D. dissertation on
discomycetes (Pezizales and Leotiales) occurring in Primorsky
Territory.
Dr. Mikhail Pivkin and Dr Lyubov Zvereva. Dr
Pivkin, a phytopatologist, works at the Pacific Institute of
Bioorganic Chemistry. In 1995, he began investigating fungi
(mostly deuteromycetes) of benthos in marine localities and
their biological activity. More than 2000 strains have been
obtained in culture, and about half of these are deposited in
KMM. Dr. Zvereva, also a specialist on marine mycology, works at
the Institute of Marine Biology where she is investigating the
species composition and ecology of lignicolous, phycolous and
arenicolous ascomycetes and deuteromycetes. Special attention is
focused on marine fungi invading the thallus of Laminaria
which is cultivated in the Russian Far East.
Although not very numerous, Russian Far East
mycologists represent a highly active scientific group. They are
fortunate in being able to study fungi in a region where
features of North American, East Asian and Euro-Asian flora
combine and interact, and which is characterized by a rich
biodiversity of vascular plants. The latter implies a
corresponding diversity of fungi associated with these plants,
and the number of new and interesting findings speaks for
itself. Over the two last years, a project involving "Fungi of
Reserve Ecosystems in the Russian Far East" was supported by a
grant from the International Science Foundation.
Although participation in conferences held
overseas is still difficult, mycologists in the region do their
best to become involved in such meetings. For example, several
mycologists submitted abstracts of their research to the XVIII
Pacific Science Congress held in Beijing, China. Collaboration
with colleagues abroad interested in the mycobiota of the
Northern Pacific and in the work of the region's mycologists is
always welcome.
HONG
KONG SAR
Department
of Biology and Chemistry, City University of Hong Kong
The Department's active group of mycologists
was strengthened in May, 1997, when Professor E B Gareth Jones
joined the City University as the Royal Society Kan Tan Po
Visiting Professor for 12 months. During his stay, he continued
his research on mangrove fungi, their taxonomy, ecology and
physiology.
Earlier, in September 1996, Dr Stephen
Pointing joined the Mycology Group as a Postdoctoral Fellow to
work on cellulolytic activities of marine fungi in collaboration
with Professor John Buswell of The Chinese University of Hong
Kong. Ms Choi Yuen Wah was employed as a Research Assistant to
work on the project entitled "Diversity of Subtropical and
Tropical Coelomycetes and the Production of Bioactive Compounds"
under the supervision of Professor Jones.
The Molecular Biology group is also active in
mycological-related research with Dr So Chi-Leung, Mr Liao Xiang
Hai and Mr Stephen Kim working on a project entitled "Molecular
Investigation of the
b-Lactam
Biosynthetic Genes in Marine Fungi".
During the past year, Mr Luo Wen has
registered as a Ph.D student to work on the project "Growth
Studies of Marine Fungi", under the supervision of Dr Lilian
Vrijmoed and Prof. Gareth Jones.
Two research grants have been awarded by the
University to Dr Lilian Vrijmoed to work on "The mycota associated
with the mangrove plant Kandelia candel and their
decomposition" and on "Utilisation of wastes using marine
microbes". Prof E B Gareth Jones also obtained University funding
to work on "Diversity of Subtropical and Tropical Coelomycetes and
the Production of Bioactive Compounds". A joint research programme
entitled "Novel metabolites of marine fungi" was also initiated
between Dr Lilian Vrijmoed and Professor E B G Jones of City
University and Professor Yong-shing Lin and Professor Shining Zhou
of Zhongshan University, Guangzhou, China. The collaborative
project is supported by a grant from the National Science
Foundation, PRC.
In May 1997, Dr Lilian Vrijmoed completed a
Hong Kong Government consultancy project aimed at obtaining
baseline information on the quantitative and qualitative aspects
of fungal spore load in the indoor environment of office buildings
and public areas such as restaurants and cinemas.
Department of Ecology and Biodiversity,
University of Hong Kong
The Department
has a large and active research group engaged on various aspects
of tropical mycology. Initially, the group focused its
activities on traditional taxonomic research on the biodiversity
of fungi in tropical aquatic habitats and on palms, but has
since extended its range of interests and activities to include
a wider range of host plants, fungal pathogenic and
wood-decaying activities within hosts and substrates, and
ultrastructural and molecular approaches to taxonomy.
The group is under the overall direction of
Dr. K.D. Hyde and the Departmental Head, Professor I.D. Hodgkiss.
Research projects currently in progress include: (a) a
comparison of endophytic and saprophytic microfungi on three
genera of palms throughout Hong Kong, Brunei and Australia; (b)
comparison of the mycoflora of three palm species planted across
the globe to determine if palm fungi travel concomitantly with
their hosts or whether new mycota takes over following
introduction of the host to a new environment; (c) fungal
biodiversity on Pandanaceae and species of bamboo; (d) an
investigation to determine the existence of an endophytic phase
in the life cycles of fungal pathogens associated with Citrus
Stem End Rot; (e) seasonal changes in fungal biodiversity and
the vertical distribution of fungi on grasses and sedges
occurring in estuarine, freshwater and terrestrial habitats in
Hong Kong.
Several research projects are directed
specifically at freshwater fungi and include: (i) the taxonomy
of aquatic ascomycetes and hyphomycetes; (ii) the biodiversity
and ultrastructure of fungi on woody substrates submerged in
streams and rivers in Brunei, Malaysia and Hong Kong; (iii) the
wood-degrading abilities of tropical freshwater fungi; and (iv)
the effects of human activities (e.g. industrial pollution) on
the fungal assemblages of freshwater habitats in the region.
Two projects directed at producing monographs
of the respective taxa are (a) a re-evaluation of the taxa in
the Phyllachoraceae in Australia, and (b) an examination of
species within the genus Anthostomella.
Several projects are underway involving
molecular and ultrastructural analyses, complementing on-going
research based on morphological characters. These include (a)
the application of molecular techniques to the taxonomy of the
Bipolaris-Curvularia complex; (b) molecular systematics
of Amphisphaeriaceous fungi; (c) DNA sequencing to verify
species within Annulatascus and related species; (d)
molecular systematics of the Pleosporales, the Melanommatales,
and the genus Massarina; (e) a comparative analysis of
molecular and traditional techniques for studying endophyte
biodiversity within palm tissue; and (f) electron microscopy to
elucidate the ultrastructure of Annulatascus and
Massarina species. Some of the research is in
collaboration with other institutions including the University
of Portsmouth, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, City University
of Hong Kong, and the Australian Council for International
Agricultural Research.
Other activities include the preservation and
maintenance of a herbarium and a fungal culture collection with
a current accession of record of over 1400 cultures. Funding has
also been received recently to develop a Centre for Research in
Fungal Biodiversity.
News
from the Regions
INDIA
International
Symposium on "Ecology of Fungi".
An international symposium on "Ecology of
Fungi" was held at the International Centre in Goa from 20-22
January, 1998. The symposium was organised jointly by IMACA and
the Mycological Association of India (MSI), and sponsored by
IMACA, MSI, the Department of Science and Technology, Government
of India, the British Mycological Society, Himedia Laboratories
PVT Limited (Mumbai), The Scientific Instrument Co. Ltd
(Mumbai), Scientek Instruments PVT. Ltd (Bangalore), and Kare
Pharma (Goa).
The scientific programme included the
Presidential Address of MSI by Professor R.S. Mehrotra entitled
"Certain aspects of Trichoderma taxonomy, ecology,
biology and control", and two Plenary Lectures, "Some advances
in fungal ecology over the past 50 years" by Professor John
Webster, and "The excitement of doing mycology in the tropics"
by Professor C.V. Subramanian. The five oral and five poster
sessions comprising the main body of the 3-day international
symposium covered the following major areas: Community
Structure and Function; Organic Matter Degradation and
Physiology; Fungus/Plant Associations; Diversity; and
Anthropogenic Effects and Epidemiology. Social events included a
Symposium Dinner, and a delightful presentation of traditional
Goan dancing.
The symposium was a great success, and warm
thanks are extended to Professor B.S. Sonde, Vice Chancellor,
Goa University, to the Organizers under the Chairmanship of
Professor B.C. Lodha, with a special mention for the Conference
Secretariat, Drs D.J. Bhat and S. Raghukumar, and to the
Sponsors for their generous support.
A selection of papers presented at the
Symposium will be published in the form of a Proceedings which
is expected to be available in late 1998/early 1999. Further
information may be obtained from: Dr. S. Raghukumar, Scientist,
B.O.D., National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa
403004, India.
CHINA
Mycological Society
of China
The former affiliation of Mycological
Society of China (MSC) as a Division of the Botanical Society of
China (BSC) was dissolved in 1993 so that MSC is now an
independent Society with a new statute distinct from BSC.
Founded in 1980, the Society's aims are to
promote the advancement of Mycology in China by organizing the
academic exchanges and symposia or seminars, publishing
periodicals, acting as the official mouthpiece for mycologists
of China. Council consists of 25 members including President,
Vice Presidents and Secretary. There are local branches in
various provinces. National Congress attended by several
hundred representatives in which the election of new council
members is conducted is held very 4 years. Meetings of
different specific topics are held each year. Membership is
open to anyone possessing at least a Bachelor's degree. There
are ca. 1700 members at present including student members and a
few foreign members. The following autonomous special Divisions
are now being developed:
1. Division of Edible & Pharmaceutical
Fungus Research.
2. Division of Entomogenous Fungus
Research.
3. Division of Medical Mycology.
4. Division of Veterinary Mycology.
5. Division of Plant Pathogenic Fungus
Research.
6. Division of Mycotoxin and Antifungal
Agents Research.
7. Division of Mycorrhizal Research.
8. Division of Industrial Mycology &
Fungal Genetics.
Publications:
1. ACTA MYCOLOGICA SINICA
A quarterly journal that publishes original
research papers and reviews in all aspects of Mycology and
Lichenology. Articles are published in Chinese with abstracts
in English. Each issue contains 80 pages and each volume 320
pages. Fourteen volumes have been published since 1982 and the
journal entered its 15th year of publication in 1996.
Subscription is on an annual basis. Orders should be sent to
China International Book Trading corporation, P.O. Box 399,
Beijing. Editorial office: Institute of Microbiology Academia
Sinica, Beijing 100080.
2. MYCOLOGIA SINICA
A journal to be published quarterly.
Contributions are accepted in all aspects of Mycology.
Publications will be published in either English with Chinese
abstracts or Chinese with English abstracts. The editorial board
consists of young mycologists in China. All communications
should be addressed to Prof. Li Yu, Jilin Agricultural
University, Changchun, Jilin 130118.
3. STUDY & APPLICATION OF ENTOMOGENOUS
FUNGI IN CHINA
A serial publications issued at irregular
intervals, edited by Division of Entomogenous Fungus Research of
MSC. Recent issue (vol.3) was published in 1993. All
communications should be addressed to Prof. Li Zeng-zhi, Anhui
Agricultural University, Hefei 230036.
PHILIPPINES
Visit of
Foreign Mycologists
Two staff from the International Mycological
Institute (IMI), Dr. David Smith and Dr. Paul Kirk of the United
Kingdom, visited the Mycology Laboratory and the Mycological
Herbarium at the Department of Plant Pathology of the University
of the Philippines at Los Banos. They also visited all the
major culture collections in the country. Their visit is part
of their mission to help member countries under the Center for
Agriculture and Bioscience International (CABI) in cooperation
with the Philippines Council for Agriculture Resources Research
and Development (PCARRD). They will assist in the preparation
of a proposal for the bioconservation of microbial genetic
resources and microbial inventory in the region.
Dr Richard Hanlin, Department of Plant
Pathology, University of Georgia, and former President of the
Mycological Society of America, visited the Mycology Laboratory
at UPLB in June 1997.
Foreign Visits
of IMACA member
From 1-15 November, Dr. T.H. Quimio visited
the Molecular Systematics Laboratory, Los Angeles Museum of
Natural History for training in the use of the PCR method for
identifying mushroom strains under the supervision of Dr. Don R.
Reynolds.
SINGAPORE
Singapore Institute of Biology
A new journal: Asian Journal of Tropical
Biology. The journal is devoted to the publication of original
papers, review articles and other features in the broad field of
tropical biology. All contributions and unsolicited review
papers are subject to international review. Contributions on
tropical mycology are welcome. These may be mailed to the
Managing Editor (H.H.Yeo, e.mail: sbsyhh@nus.edu.sg) or IMACA's
representative (T.K.Tan, e.mail: sbstantk@nus.edu.sg) at:
Department of Biological Sciences, National University of
Singapore, Kent Ridge Road, Singapore 119260. Copies of
"Instructions to Authors" are available on request.
HONG KONG SAR
Mycological
Association of Hong Kong
The
Mycological Association of Hong Kong (MAHK) was established on
13th February, 1997 and presently has over 30 members. The
following mycologists currently serve on the Association's first
Committee: Professor I.J. Hodgkiss (Chairman), Dr. K.D.Hyde
(Secretary), Dr Stephen Pointing (Treasurer), Prof. John Buswell,
Dr Lilian Vrijmoed and Mr W.H. Ho. The Association will promote
mycological education and research in the Special Administrative
Region and will publish a regular Newsletter providing
information on its activities.
The inaugural meeting of MAHK was held at the
University of Hong Kong on Friday, 6th June 1997. Both the
British Mycological Association and IMACA sent messages of
support to the new Association. This was followed by the First
Annual Meeting of MAHK. Professor E.B.G. Jones was guest speaker
and presented a lecture on "Omega-3 (n-3) polyunsaturated fatty
acids from waste materials". The one day meeting included a
further 16 research papers and 3 posters covering ecological,
applied and molecular aspects of mycology. An award for the best
paper was made to Mr. W.H. Ho for his paper entitled "An
ultrastructural study on the conidia of Cancelisporium
and Sporoschima (Hyphomycetes)." The day's events were
followed by a buffet dinner to celebrate the formation of the
Association.
The Second Annual Meeting of MAHK was held
on campus of The Chinese University of Hong Kong on 29th May and
included a guest lecture, "Mycology and the Australian Eucalypt
Forest", delivered by Dr Jack Simpson, President of the
Australasian Mycological Society. The remainder of the
scientific programme consisted of 16 oral and 6 poster
presentations covering a wide range of mycological topics
including fungal physiology and biochemistry, molecular
mycology, fungal ecology and systematics, and applied mycology.
The meeting was attended by over 40 mycologists from CUHK, Hong
Kong University and City University. Ms. Deng Yu, an M.Phil.
student from the Department of Biology at CUHK, was awarded the
Association's annual prize for the best student presentation,
and a design by Mr Jake Tang, also from the University's Biology
Department, was selected as the official MAHK logo. The
Association received congratulatory letters from Professor Z.C.
Chen, Chairman of IMACA, and Professor S.T. Chang,
Vice-President of the World Society of Mushroom Biology and
Mushroom Products.
NEPAL
IMACA conducted a 'Fungal Flora Expedition
of Nepal Himalaya' in October, 1997 under the leadership of Dr.
Z.C. Chen in which Taiwanese, Japanese and Nepalese mycologist
participated. Expedition members collected numerous mushrooms,
mycorrhiza and soil fungi. The Department of Plant Resources,
Plant Research Division, published 'Fungi of Nepal Part I" in
1996 and Part II in 1997. Usha Budathoki, Nepal's representative
on IMACA, published an article entitled 'Paraphialocephala
Gen. Nov. A Folicolous Hyphomycetes' in Recent Researches in
Ecology, Environment and Pollution Vol. 10 Himalayan Microbial
Diversity, New Delhi, 1996. The Mycological Society of Nepal has
been established under the Chairmanship of Dr. Usha Budathoki.
Dr. Ji-Yul-Lee of Korea visited Nepal, collected mushrooms and
held discussions with Nepalese mycologists. In 1996, Dr. Usha
Budathoki participated in the Nineteenth Bangladesh Science
Conference organised by the Bangladesh Association for the
Advancement of Science (BAAS). In 1997, she participated in the
9th Biennial Botanical Conference, also in Bangladesh.
REPUBLIC OF KOREA
The Mycological
Association of Korea
The The Annual Autumn Scientific Meeting of
the Mycological Association of Korea was held at Dongkuk
University, Seoul, 19-20th December, 1997. The meeting was
organised in conjunction with the Third Korea-China Joint
Mycological Seminar which included over 20 mycologists from
mainland China. The next Korea-China Joint Mycological Seminar
is scheduled to be held in China in 1999, and mycologists from
other countries are encouraged to attend. Further information
can be obtained from Dr. M.W.Lee, President, Mycological Society
of Korea, Dongkuk University, Seoul, Korea.
Mushroom
Research Association of Korea
People interested in mushrooms recently
organised a non-academic mycological association under the
Presidency of Dr. K.S. Yoon, Kangwon National University. The
Association is not a typical mycological society but a group
consisting of mushroom biologists and mushroom growers.
Formation of the association was motivated originally by
mycologists from universities and government mushroom research
stations for the purpose of providing domestic mushroom growers
with information relating to the improvement of mushroom yields,
the control of mushroom pests, and other problems associated
with the mushroom industry.
The Association held its first two meetings
at Kangwon University in May and December 1997. Meetings were
well attended by mushroom farmers, and the programme included
lectures on Cordyceps Fruit Body Induction on Synthetic
Media, and Pest Control During Fruiting of Pleurotus.
The Association also publishes bi-annually a magazine
called"Mushrooms" (Editing Manager, Dr. Y.S. Lee). Further
information can be obtained from: Dr. J.K. Lee, General Manager,
Mushroom Research Association of Korea, c/o Department of
Forestry Resources Protection, Kangwon University, Chunchon
200-701, South Korea.
TAIWAN
A symposium on identification
techniques for mycological resources was held at the National
Museum of Natural Science (NMNS) in Taichung from 19-21
December, 1997. The purpose of the symposium, which was
sponsored by the National Science Council Life Science Promotion
Center, was to develop an interest in mycology among the younger
generation of Taiwan. Professor Z.C. Chen, Chairman of IMACA,
chaired the symposium and fifteen specialists were invited to
give lectures in their particular areas of expertise.
Undergraduates and graduates from colleges and universities
throughout the country were among 136 participants attending the
meeting. The symposium included a day of lectures at the NMNS
followed by a two-day fungal foray centred around the Hei-Sun
Forest Experimental Station, National Chung-Hsing University
which is located approximately 1500 metres above sea-level.
In May this year, Professor F.
Oberwinkler, President of the International Mycological
Association, and Dr. J.C. Chen visited Taiwan in order to
collect jelly fungi from the Central Mountains area. During his
visit, Professor Oberwinkler delivered a seminar entitled "Basidiomycetes
and their host plants - coevolving associations" in the
Department of Botany at the National Taiwan University
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