- Source: Ammonia fungi
Ammonia fungi are fungi that develop fruit bodies exclusively or relatively abundantly on soil that has had ammonia or other nitrogen-containing materials added. The nitrogen materials react as bases by themselves, or after decomposition. The addition of ammonia or urea causes numerous chemical and biological changes, for examples, the pH of soil litter is increased to 8–10; the high alkaline conditions interrupts the process of nutrient recycling. The mechanisms of colonization, establishment, and occurrence of fruiting bodies of ammonia fungi has been researched in the field and the laboratory.
Species
Ascobolus denudatus
Calocybe leucocephala
Coprinopsis cinerea
Coprinopsis echinospora
Coprinopsis neolagopus
Coprinopsis neophlyctidospora
Coprinopsis phlyctidospora
Coprinopsis stercorea
Crucispora rhombisperma
Hebeloma luchuense
Hebeloma radicosoides
Hebeloma radicosum
Hebeloma spoliatum
Hebeloma vinosophyllum
Laccaria amethystina
Laccaria bicolor
Sagaranella tylicolor
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Karbon dioksida
- Pupuk Kalimantan Timur
- Pupuk
- Ikatan kimia
- Foraminifera
- Retaria
- Ammonia fungi
- Fungus
- Laccaria amethystina
- Microbiology of decomposition
- Hebeloma aminophilum
- Laccaria bicolor
- Coprinopsis cinerea
- Nitrification
- Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase
- Coprinopsis neophlyctidospora