Mushrooms, Humans and Nature in a Changing World, 1st ed. 2020
Perspectives from Ecological, Agricultural and Social Sciences

Language: English

168.79 €

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Mushrooms, Humans and Nature in a Changing World
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Support: Print on demand

158.24 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Mushrooms, Humans and Nature in a Changing World
Publication date:
480 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
This book focuses on recent advances in our understanding of wild edible mycorrhizal fungi, truffle and mushrooms and their cultivation. In addition to providing fresh insights into various topics, e.g. taxonomy, ecology, cultivation and environmental impact, it also demonstrates the clear but fragile link between wild edible mushrooms and human societies. Comprising 17 chapters written by 41 experts from 13 countries on four continents, it enables readers to grasp the importance of protecting this unique, invaluable, renewable resource in the context of climate change and unprecedented biodiversity loss. 

The book inspires professionals and encourages young researchers to enter this field to develop the sustainable use of wild edible mushrooms using modern tools and approaches. It also highlights the importance of protecting forested environments, saving species from extinction and generating a significant income for local populations, while keeping alive and renewing the link between humans and wild edible mushrooms so that in the future, the sustainable farming and use of edible mycorrhizal mushrooms will play a predominant role in the management and preservation of forested lands.

Prologue.- Introduction.- 1)Setting the scene.- Biodiversity and cultivation.- 2)Edible ectomycorrhizal fungi and their cultivation in china.- 3)Climate change, biotechnology and mexican neotropical edible ectomycorrhizal mushrooms.- 4)Diversity and importance of edible ectomycorrhizal fungi in guatemala.- 5)Advances in the cultivation of Lactarius deliciosus (saffron milk cap) in new zealand.- 6)Edible mushrooms and their cultural importance in yunnan, china.- 7)Advances in desert truffle mycorrhization and cultivation.- case studies.- 8)Diversity, biogeographic distribution, ecology and ectomycorrhizal relationships of the edible porcini mushrooms (Boletus s. str., Boletaceae) worldwide: state of the art and an annotated check-list.- 9)Recent insights in the phylogeny, species diversity and culinary uses of milkcap genera Lactarius and Lactifluus.- 10)Advances in the cultivation of truffles in canada.- 11)Diversity and ecology of edible mushrooms from patagonia native forests, argentina.- 12)Truffle cultivation in the south of france: socio-economic characteristics.- 13)Ethnomycology in europe: the past, the present, and the future.- ecology with emphasis on wild edible fungi.- 14)Interactions between soil mesofauna and edible ectomycorrhizal mushrooms.- 15)Diversity and importance of edible mushrooms in ectomycorrhizal communities on mexican neotropics.- 16)A checklist of ectomycorrhizal mushrooms associated to Quercus humboldtii in colombia.- 17)Modifications of community structure in ectomycorrhizal artic fungi as a consequence of global warming.

Jesus Pérez Moreno is a Professor at Colegio de Postgraduados, Mexico, with a PhD from the University of Sheffield, England. He has delivered lectures in Canada, China, Colombia, Ecuador, England, France, Guatemala, Japan, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Spain, Thailand and Sri Lanka; his articles have been cited 2,700 times by researchers from 55 countries. Author of 15 books and 23 book chapters; supervisor of 50 MSc and PhDs and invited Professor at the University of Sheffield and at the Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). He has studied during 30 years the relationship between mushrooms and humans focusing on sustainable development, poverty alleviation, food security and mitigation of climate change.

Alexis Guerin-Laguette is a Senior Scientist at The New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Ltd focusing on edible mycorrhizal fungi (EMF). He has worked in France, Japan and Canada. His passion for EMF stems from his PhDon Lactarius deliciosus and postdoc on Tricholoma matsutake. In New Zealand, he extended his activities to truffles. He is the Technical Representative for the NZ Truffle Association and since 2015, has collaborated with the Kunming Institute of Botany, CAS. He has authored over 20 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters. He is the Secretary of the International Workshop on Edible Mycorrhizal Mushrooms. 

Roberto Flores Arzú is a Professor at the Universidad de San Carlos, Guatemala with a PhD from the University of Murcia, Spain. He has been a visiting scholar at IRTA in Barcelona; Universities of Tlaxcala, Mexico; Bologna, Pavia, and Cagliari in Italy.  He has published papers on the macrofungi of Guatemala and the description and synthesis of ectomycorrhizae of Neotropical trees. His current research, in collaboration with scientists from China, Italy, Mexico and Japan, focuses on macrofungal taxonomy, ectomycorrhizae and ethnomycology. 
Presents the current knowledge on valuable wild edible mushrooms and the latest advances in their cultivation Summarizes the potential and the latest advances in the field, and also discusses the importance of mycorrhizal mushrooms in the context of climate change Gathers know-how and advances from leading international experts, covering topics such as diversity, molecular biology, biotechnology, cultivation, as well cultural, social, economic and environmental aspects