Jean-Marc Moncalvo
University of Toronto
88 Papers
462 Citations
Jean-Marc Moncalvo is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Phylogenetic tree. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 83 publications. Previous affiliations of Jean-Marc Moncalvo include Royal Ontario Museum & Duke University.
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Papers
Variation in modes and rates of evolution in nuclear and mitochondrial ribosomal DNA in the mushroom genus Amanita (Agaricales, Basidiomycota): phylogenetic implications.
TL;DR: Heterogeneity in modes and rates of evolution in the two molecules pose difficulties for a combined analysis of the two data sets: the use of equally weighted parsimony is not fully satisfactory when rate heterogeneity is present, and it is impractical to determine a model for maximum-likelihood analysis that fits simultaneously two heterogeneous data sets.
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Mating compatibility and phylogeography in Pleurotus tuberregium
TL;DR: All isolates were found to be intersterile with tester strains of other Pleurotus species, showing that P. tuberregium represents a unique intersterility group in PleuroTus.
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Inonotus s. l. in Argentina — Morphology, cultural characters and molecular analyses
TL;DR: Both cultural and molecular data support the view that Ptychogaster cubensis represents an anamorphic state of I. rickii, and two new combinations are proposed, namely Phellinus crustosus and Inocutis jamaicensis.
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Impact of an 8-Year-Old Transgenic Poplar Plantation on the Ectomycorrhizal Fungal Community
Franck O.P. Stefani,Franck O.P. Stefani,Jean-Marc Moncalvo,Armand Séguin,Jean A. Bérubé,Richard C. Hamelin +5 more
TL;DR: No evidence of difference in the EM fungal community structure linked to the long-term presence of the transgenic poplars studied is found, and it is shown that coupling root tip analysis with a soil DNA cloning strategy is a complementary approach to better document EMfungal diversity.
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•Journal Article
Amanitaceae reported from India. A critically annotated checklist
TL;DR: An updated list of those members of the Amanitaceae described, illustrated or listed from different parts of India to date is provided, including 53 names, of which 50 names are combined in Amanita and the rest in Limacella.
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