Publications on this list will help visitors to the Preserve identify and appreciate fungi and slime molds found as well as learn about the classification and ecology of the species they encounter. An effort has been made to include the references that are referred to in the text of this website.
Hawksworth, D.L. 1991.The fungal dimension of biodiversity : magnitude, significance, and conservation. Mycological Research 95: 641–655 (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0953756209808101).
Hawksworth, D.L. 2011. The magnitude of fungal diversity. The 1.5 million species estimate revisited. Mycological Research 12: 1422— 1432 (http://www.davidmoore.org.uk/21st_Century_Guidebook_to_Fungi_PLATINUM/REPRINT_collection/Hawksworth_magnitud_diversity2001.pdf).
Naczi, R. F., S. A. Mori, M. Rothman, C. Corolla Matos & J. Jiang. 2015 onward. Flowering Plants in Plants and Fungi of the Westchester Wilderness Walk/Zofnass Family Preserve. The New York Botanical Garden, New York (https://sweetgum.nybg.org/wlt/angiosperms.php).
Royal Botanic Gardens Kew. 2018a accessed. Index Fungorum (http://www.indexfungorum.org/).
Royal Botanic Gardens Kew. 2018b accessed. State of the World’s Fungi (https://stateoftheworldsfungi.og/).
International Mycological Association. 2018 accessed. MycoBankDatabase. Fungal Databases, Nomenclature & Species Banks (http://www.mycobank.org/defaultinfo.aspx?Page=Home).
Landcare Research (Manaki Whenua). 2018 accessed. New Zealand Fungarium (https://www.landcareresearch.co.nz/resources/collections/pdd).
Yih, D. 2016. Plants and mycorrhizae (Part 3). Food, poison, and intelligence gathering: mycorrhizal networks in action. Connecticut Botanical Society Newsletter 43(2): 4–7. An informative paper in which the relationships among flowering plants and mycorrhizal fungi are explained.