The Amsterdam Declaration on Fungal Nomenclature was agreed at an international symposium convened in Amsterdam on 19-20 April 2011 under the auspices of the International Commission on the Taxonomy of Fungi (ICTF). The purpose of the symposium was to address the issue of whether or how the current system of naming pleomorphic fungi should be maintained or changed now that molecular data are routinely available. The issue is urgent as mycologists currently follow different practices, and no consensus was achieved by a Special Committee appointed in 2005 by the International Botanical Congress to advise on the problem. The Declaration recognizes the need for an orderly transitition to a single-name nomenclatural system for all fungi, and to ...
The unambiguous application of fungal names is important to communicate scientific findings. Names a...
A growing proportion of fungal species and lineages are known only from sequence data and cannot be ...
The unambiguous application of fungal names is important to communicate scientific findings. Names a...
The Amsterdam Declaration on Fungal Nomenclature was agreed at an international symposium convened i...
The Amsterdam Declaration on Fungal Nomenclature was agreed at aninternational symposium convened in...
Numerous taxonomists and monographers of fungi are objecting an enforced unitary nomenclature for as...
Mycologists have recorded a few hundred thousand Latin names for fungi and these are thought to refe...
A personal synopsis of the decisions made at the Nomenclature Section meeting of the International B...
Some fungi with pleomorphic life-cycles still bear two names despite more than 20 years of molecular...
The new rules formulated in Article 59 of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, a...
An explanation is provided of the recent changes in the International Code of Nomenclature for algae...
Seven proposals to modify the provisions of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi,...
The unambiguous application of fungal names is important to communicate scientific findings. Names a...
A growing proportion of fungal species and lineages are known only from sequence data and cannot be ...
The unambiguous application of fungal names is important to communicate scientific findings. Names a...
The Amsterdam Declaration on Fungal Nomenclature was agreed at an international symposium convened i...
The Amsterdam Declaration on Fungal Nomenclature was agreed at aninternational symposium convened in...
Numerous taxonomists and monographers of fungi are objecting an enforced unitary nomenclature for as...
Mycologists have recorded a few hundred thousand Latin names for fungi and these are thought to refe...
A personal synopsis of the decisions made at the Nomenclature Section meeting of the International B...
Some fungi with pleomorphic life-cycles still bear two names despite more than 20 years of molecular...
The new rules formulated in Article 59 of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, a...
An explanation is provided of the recent changes in the International Code of Nomenclature for algae...
Seven proposals to modify the provisions of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi,...
The unambiguous application of fungal names is important to communicate scientific findings. Names a...
A growing proportion of fungal species and lineages are known only from sequence data and cannot be ...
The unambiguous application of fungal names is important to communicate scientific findings. Names a...