Inocybe baltica
itämerenrisakas
- Category
- fungi
- Primary role
- pathogen fungal
- Class
- Agaricomycetes
- Order
- Agaricales
- Family
- Inocybaceae
- Genus
- Inocybe
Fungi | Basidiomycota | Agaricomycetes | Agaricales | Inocybaceae | Inocybe
External: GBIF #9680071
0 AI-consensus-verified claims .
No verified claims involving this entity yet.
Aggregated via GloBI — not independently verified by AgroEco.
mutualism 1
- GloBI symbiontOf Inocybe baltica Rincón, A., Santamaría-Pérez, B., Rabasa, S.G., Coince, A., Marçais, B. and Buée, M., 2015. Compartmentalized and contrasted response of ectomycorrhizal and soil fungal communities of Scots pine forests along elevation gradients in France and Spain.. Environmental Microbiology. doi:10.1111/1462-2920.12894 DOI
mycorrhizal 2
- GloBI ectomycorrhizalHostOf Inocybe baltica Saitta_2018_51C8, Tree species identity and diversity drive fungal richness and community composition along an elevational gradient in a Mediterranean ecosystem. Mycorrhiza.
- GloBI ectomycorrhizalHostOf Inocybe baltica Rincon_2015_E6C1, Compartmentalized and contrasted response of ectomycorrhizal and soil fungal communities of Scots pine forests along elevation gradients in France and Spain.. Environmental Microbiology.
crop interaction 3
- GloBI ectomycorrhizalHostOf Inocybe baltica Saitta_2018_51C8, Tree species identity and diversity drive fungal richness and community composition along an elevational gradient in a Mediterranean ecosystem. Mycorrhiza.
- GloBI ectomycorrhizalHostOf Inocybe baltica Rincon_2015_E6C1, Compartmentalized and contrasted response of ectomycorrhizal and soil fungal communities of Scots pine forests along elevation gradients in France and Spain.. Environmental Microbiology.
- GloBI symbiontOf Inocybe baltica Rincón, A., Santamaría-Pérez, B., Rabasa, S.G., Coince, A., Marçais, B. and Buée, M., 2015. Compartmentalized and contrasted response of ectomycorrhizal and soil fungal communities of Scots pine forests along elevation gradients in France and Spain.. Environmental Microbiology. doi:10.1111/1462-2920.12894 DOI