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Hello, folks. The blog is now up, thanks to the gang at WildlifeDirect. These postings will be somewhat retrospective as the first team has been on the islands for nearly three weeks already. Also, internet connections are very slow here (Principe, at the moment), but I will do my best. I notice we already have a response on the forum from a woman named Theresa, but I will have to learn how to respond later. The GG III team: Perry, Wenk, Desjardin, Eckerman, Drewes, Daniel on Principe. Macambrara, Sao Tome. RCD photo GGIII As leader of the GG expeditions I have been very excited to have our first botanists join an expedition: Dr. Tom Daniel, and his graduate student, Rebecca Wenck from CAS. Also particularly important to our goals has been the return to the islands of a mycologist (or in this case, two of them): Drs. Dennis Desjardin and post-doctoral fellow Brian Perry of San Francisco State University. I try to recruit scientists who study plant or animal groups that are poorly known in the Gulf of Guinea, and herein lies a story: Part of our mission has been to recoup our mushroom losses from Sao Tome and to conduct the first survey of cugumelos on Principe. At time of writing, the whole team has walked up and down mountainous jungle trails from sea level to 1280 meters on Sao Tome, and with logistic support we did not have during GG I (2001) and GG II we have explored every accessible habitat type on Principe, once by boat. Turns out mushrooms grow in a lot of different habitats including not far from the high tide line on beaches. Dr Dennis Desjardin on the hunt. Weckerphoto. GGIII Dr. Brian Perry also hunting. Weckerphoto, GGIII The Administration. R. Wenk photo. GGIII
4 Comments posted on "The Race Goes on: May Day Mushroom Madness"
Anna Gray on May 1st, 2008 at 12:40 pm
How exciting!!! I must venture out and say this (although it is very childish): There seems to be a fungus among us!
Batters on May 1st, 2008 at 2:17 pm
What amazing fungi! Thank you for these marvellous pictures - we live in such a wonderful world and we should look after it carefully.
Theresa Siskind St Petersburg FL on May 1st, 2008 at 7:55 pm
Beautiful pictures and great work, thank you.
Rod Tulloss on May 27th, 2008 at 6:48 pm
One of the ectomycorrhizal mushrooms (a species of the genus Amanita) has arrived in New Jersey thanks to a loan from Dennis Desjardin at SFSU. I am beginning to review it. It’s spores are very small. This may mean that the spores are more likely to pass around tree trunks than to impact on them. Hence, they could be adapted to an environment in which groups of ectomycorrhizal symbionts are separated by some distance in the local forests. Post a comment
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