Australasian truffle-like fungi. IX. History and current trends in the study of the taxonomy of sequestrate macrofungi from Australia and New Zealand
Teresa Lebel and Michael A. Castellano
Australian Systematic Botany 12(6) 803 - 817
Abstract
Australian sequestrate macrofungi have not been studied extensively until
recently, even though their presence in Australia was recognised over 120
years ago by Baron Ferdinand von Mueller in connection with mycophagy by
marsupials. The early mycological history in Australia is linked to the first
expeditions and collections of plant material by naturalists from 1790 to
1830. These collections were sent to, and described by, foreign mycologists
such as the Rev. M. J. Berkeley, the Rev. C. Kalchbrenner and E. M. Fries. M.
C. Cooke's (1892) Handbook of Australian Fungi was
the first attempt at compiling an Australian mycoflora. D. McAlpine and L.
Rodway were the first resident collectors to expand on the information
collated by Cooke. Later, G. H. Cunningham (1944) wrote
The Gasteromycetes of New Zealand and Australia,
bringing together the taxonomy of all known sequestrate macrofungi in the
region. By 1895 approximately 2000 species of fungi had been recorded from
Australia, 32 of them sequestrate. Recent intensive efforts in limited
habitats have expanded our knowledge considerably, with more than 600 new
species of sequestrate fungi recorded over the past 7 years. Many more remain
to be discovered in Australia and New Zealand and knowledge of their biology
and ecology needs to be developed.
Full text doi:10.1071/SB97039
© CSIRO 1999





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