№ files_lp_3_process_9_67941
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Compiled reference list presenting translations and explanations of Latin scientific names and common suffixes used for larger fungi, based on earlier books and dictionaries.
Author:
R. D. Cundall
Compiler:
Dr. Bob Cundall
OCR by:
Mike Walton
Scan provided by:
Paul Hamlyn
Year of compilation:
1995
Place of compilation:
Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England
Address of author:
32 Woodside, Harrogate, North Yorks., HG1 5NG
Affiliation:
Mid Yorkshire Fungus Group
Subject:
Etymology of scientific names of larger fungi
Type of document:
Compiled reference list
Scope:
Incomplete list of selected Latin names and suffixes
Intended audience:
Mycologists and readers interested in fungal nomenclature
Rights statement:
May be copied freely
Price: 8 / 10 USD
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The product description is provided for reference. Actual content and formatting may differ slightly.
Year:
2025
Region / city:
São Paulo
Topic:
Aero engines, industrial gas turbines, maintenance services
Document type:
Press release
Organization / institution:
MTU Maintenance do Brasil
Author:
Saša Lakić
Target audience:
Industry professionals, stakeholders in aerospace and turbine industries
Effective date:
October 9, 2025
Date of changes:
N/A
Year:
2012–2013
Organization:
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science
Document Type:
Project Execution Plan (PEP)
Target Audience:
Federal Project Director, Integrated Project Team, Contractors
Project Name:
Project Name (Acronym)
Location:
National Laboratory
Approval Authorities:
Acquisition Executive, Office of Project Assessment, Office of Science
Revision History:
Changes to Change Control Tables and Funding Requirements
Scope:
Defines project execution, monitoring, and control processes for large-scale DOE projects
Content Sections:
Introduction, Project Baseline, Life Cycle Cost, Acquisition Approach, Tailoring Strategy, Baseline Change Control, Management Structure, Project Management/Oversight, Appendices
Context:
Technical and administrative source detailing procedures, responsibilities, and approval processes for executing a DOE project, including scope, schedule, cost, risk management, and organizational framework.
Year:
2017
Region / city:
Fountain Valley, CALIF.
Subject:
Residential water heating systems, tankless water heaters
Document type:
Press release
Organization:
Noritz America
Author:
Andrew Tran
Target audience:
Professional installers, homeowners
Effective period:
April 11, 2017
Approval date:
April 11, 2017
Changes date:
N/A
Year:
2018
Jurisdiction:
New York State
Applicable Law:
New York Not-for-Profit Corporation Law (N-PCL); NY Public Health Law Section 2994A; IRS regulations on excess benefit transactions
Document Type:
Policy
Subject:
Conflict of interest and compensation governance
Adopting Body:
Board of Directors
Applies To:
Directors, officers, key persons, and related parties
Scope:
Charitable organizations and their affiliates
Status:
Sample for general guidance
Legal Disclaimer:
Not intended as legal advice
Year:
2023
Region / City:
United States
Theme:
Demographic comparison
Document Type:
Report
Organization:
Not specified
Author:
Not specified
Target Audience:
General public
Period of Validity:
Not specified
Approval Date:
Not specified
Date of Changes:
Not specified
Context:
Demographic data analysis comparing U.S. Muslims to the larger U.S. population in terms of gender ratio, age, education, household income, and other factors.
Year:
2018
Region / City:
Not specified
Theme:
Group analysis, architecture, societal transformation, creativity
Document type:
Workshop report
Organization / Institution:
GASI (Group Analytic Society International)
Author:
Not specified
Target audience:
Architects, group analysts, social scientists, students
Period of validity:
Not specified
Approval date:
Not specified
Date of changes:
Not specified
Year:
2019
Region / City:
European Union
Theme:
Erasmus+ programme, National Agencies, organizational structure
Document Type:
Proposal
Organization / Institution:
European Commission
Author:
Mikko Nupponen
Target Audience:
European policy makers, National Authorities
Period of validity:
2021-2028
Approval Date:
17.1.2019
Date of Changes:
N/A
Year:
2026
Region / city:
Not specified
Topic:
Spatial memory, saccades, eye movement
Document type:
Research article
Institution:
Not specified
Author:
Not specified
Target audience:
Researchers, psychologists, neuroscientists
Period of validity:
Not applicable
Approval date:
Not specified
Modification date:
Not specified
Note:
Prologue
Why, Vasher thought, do so many things begin with me getting thrown into prison? The guardsmen laughed to one another outside, slamming the cell door shut with a clang. Vasher stood and duste:
land of Returned Gods, Lifeless servants, BioChromatic research, and--of course--color. The large guard sauntered toward the cell, leaving his friends to their fun with Vasher’s pack. “They say you’re pretty tough,” the man said, sizing up Vasher. Vasher did not respond. “The bartender says you beat down some twenty men in the brawl.” The guard rubbed his chin. “You don’t look that tough to me.” Vasher shrugged. The guard snorted. “You should have known better than to strike a priest. The others, they’ll spend a night locked up. You, though--you’ll hang. Colorless fool.” Vasher turned away, looking over his cell. It was functional, if unoriginal. A thin slit in the top let in light, the stone walls dripped with water and lichen, and a pile of dirty straw decomposed in the corner. “You ignoring me?” the guard asked, stepping closer to the bars. As he did so, the colors of his uniform brightened faintly, like he’d stepped into a stronger light. The change was slight. Vasher didn’t have much Breath remaining. The guard didn’t notice the change in color--just like he hadn’t noticed back in the bar, when he and his buddies had picked Vasher up off the floor and thrown him in their cart. He’d soon wish that he’d been more observant. “Here, now,” one of the men said from behind. “What’s this?” Those two were still looking through Vasher’s pack. Vasher had always found it odd that the men who patrolled dungeons tended to be as bad, or worse, than the men they guarded. Perhaps that was intentional. Society didn’t seem to care if such men were outside the cells or in them--just as long as they were kept away from more honest men. Assuming that such a thing existed. A guard pulled a long object--wrapped in white linen--free from Vasher’s bag. The man frowned at the object, then unwrapped it, revealing a large, thin-bladed sword in a silver sheath. The hilt was pure black. The guard whistled quietly. “Who do you suppose he stole this from?” The lead guard eyed Vasher again, frowning. He was likely wondering if Vasher might be some kind of nobleman. Though such things didn’t really exist in Hallandren, many neighboring kingdoms had their lords and ladies. Yet, what lord would wear a drab brown cloak, ripped in several places? What lord would sport bruises from a bar fight, a half-grown beard, and boots worn from years of walking? Eventually, the guard turned away, apparently convinced that Vasher was no lord. He was right. And he was wrong. “Let me see that,” t
Note:
Year
Description:
This document provides formatting and submission guidelines for academic presentations.
Note:
Marks
Topic:
Automata Theory
Document Type:
Assignment
Target Audience:
Students
Date:
N/A
Institution:
N/A
Description:
The document presents assignment tasks related to automata theory and parsing complexity, requiring examples and theoretical explanations from students.
Year:
2018
Region / City:
Not specified
Subject:
Loan Agreement
Document Type:
Agreement
Issuing Entity:
Not specified
Author:
Not specified
Target Audience:
Borrower, Lender
Effective Period:
Not specified
Approval Date:
Not specified
Modification Date:
5-31-2018
Year:
2021
Region / city:
Global
Topic:
Fungal ecology, functional traits, plant-fungi interaction
Document type:
Research Article
Institution:
George Washington University, University of Tartu, University of Miami, Freie Universität-Berlin, Purdue University Northwest, Boston University, Oregon State University, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of New South Wales, ETH Zurich, University of Minnesota, Lund University, University of Florida, Clark University, University of Gothenburg, Western Sydney University, University of California Irvine
Author:
Amy E. Zanne, Kessy Abarenkov, Michelle E. Afkhami, Carlos A. Aguilar-Trigueros, Scott Bates, Jennifer M. Bhatnagar, Posy E. Busby, Natalie Christian, William K. Cornwell, Thomas W. Crowther, Habacuc Flores-Moreno, Dimitrios Floudas, Romina Gazis, David Hibbett, Peter Kennedy, Daniel L. Lindner, Daniel S. Maynard, Amy M. Milo, R. Henrik Nilsson, Jeff Powell, Mark Schildhauer, Jonathan Schilling, Kathleen K. Treseder
Target Audience:
Ecologists, biologists, mycologists, researchers in fungal functional ecology
Period of validity:
Ongoing
Approval Date:
Not mentioned
Modification Date:
Not mentioned
Year:
2023
Region / City:
N/A
Subject:
Biology
Document Type:
Assignment
Institution:
N/A
Author:
Ogunnipe Ifeoluwa Abisola
Target Audience:
Students of Biology
Period of Application:
N/A
Approval Date:
N/A
Date of Changes:
N/A
Author:
Anfal Muayad Jalaluldeen
Affiliation:
Faculty of Agriculture, Department of Plant Protection, Universiti Putra Malaysia
Note:
Affiliation
Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Universiti Putra Malaysia
Institution Location:
Serdang, Selangor Darul-Ehsan, Malaysia
Type of Document:
Scientific research article
Research Field:
Plant pathology and mycology
Main Organism Studied:
Capsicum annum L.
Fungal Species:
Glomus mosseae
Pathogen:
Fusarium oxysporum
Methodology:
Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)
Experimental Setting:
Greenhouse and laboratory conditions
Study Focus:
Root colonization and cellular structural changes
Keywords:
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, Scanning electron microscopy, Cell wall, Arbuscular
Type of document:
Laboratory worksheet
Subject:
Biology
Topics:
Mycology, Zoology, Taxonomy, Ecology, Marine Biology
Educational level:
Introductory college biology
Structure:
Short-answer questions
Number of questions:
10
Referenced materials:
Lab website images and web resources
Organisms mentioned:
Jack-O-Lantern mushroom, Chanterelle, Penicillium, Brie cheese fungi, lichens, slime molds, corals, worms, crinoids, Arthropoda, Mollusca
Purpose:
Assessment of understanding of biological classification and organismal characteristics
Note:
Year
Theme:
Mycology
Document type:
Scientific article
Author:
D.Ebtihal Muiz
Target audience:
Researchers, students, biologists
Note:
Year
Journal:
Microbial Ecology
Article title:
Taxonomic dependency of beta diversity for bacteria, archaea and fungi in a semi-arid lake
Authors:
Haijun Yuan; Weizhen Zhang; Huaqun Yin; Runyu Zhang; Jianjun Wang
Corresponding author:
Jianjun Wang ([email protected]
Note:
)
Affiliations:
State Key Laboratory of Lake Science and Environment, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, China; State Key Laboratory of Environmental Geochemistry, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang, China; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China; School of Minerals Processing and Bioengineering, Central South University, Changsha, China; Key Laboratory of Biometallurgy of Ministry of Education, Central South University, Changsha, China
Study area:
Hulun Lake, China
Subject:
Microbial ecology; beta diversity; environmental gradients
Microbial groups:
Bacteria; Archaea; Fungi
Environmental factors:
Water physicochemical variables; Sediment properties
Statistical analyses:
Pearson correlation; Mantel test; Spearman correlation; Linear and quadratic models
Content:
Supplementary tables and figures (Table S1–S2; Fig. S1–S4)
Organization:
Culture Collection of Switzerland (CCOS)
Country:
Switzerland
City:
Wädenswil
Document type:
Agreement and deposition form
Subject:
Deposition of microorganisms in a public strain collection
Scope:
Bacteria, yeasts and fungi up to Risk Group 2
Fields of concentration:
Biocatalysis, biological control, photosynthetic bacteria, diagnostic, food microbiology, research
Risk limitation:
Acceptance limited to organisms up to Risk Group 2
Regulatory framework:
Swiss national and international biosafety regulations
Related legislation:
Bacteriological Code; Convention on Biological Diversity
Collaborating institutions:
Zurich University of Applied Sciences; CTI; Federal Office for the Environment, Berne; Swiss Biotech Association; Swiss Industrial Biocatalysis Consortium; DSMZ, Braunschweig, Germany
Access conditions:
Public availability of strains for a fee
Geographical focus:
Primarily isolates from Switzerland
Requirements for new species:
Deposition of type strain in at least two collections in two different countries
Biosafety classification:
BSL 1 or BSL 2
Required depositor information:
Taxonomical data, strain history, genome data, cultivation conditions, preservation method, pathogen assessment, references
Legal declaration:
Confirmation of rights and non-violation of third-party rights
Signature requirement:
Place, date and signature of the depositor