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Joanne E. Taylor

Researcher at Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh

Publications -  46
Citations -  2833

Joanne E. Taylor is an academic researcher from Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteaceae & Microfungi. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 45 publications receiving 2383 citations. Previous affiliations of Joanne E. Taylor include Stellenbosch University & University of Botswana.

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Families of Dothideomycetes

Kevin D. Hyde, +72 more
- 10 Dec 2013 - 
TL;DR: Dothideomycetes comprise a highly diverse range of fungi characterized mainly by asci with two wall layers (bitunicate asci) and often with fissitunicate dehiscence, and it is hoped that by illustrating types they provide stimulation and interest so that more work is carried out in this remarkable group of fungi.
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The Faces of Fungi database: fungal names linked with morphology, phylogeny and human impacts

Subashini C. Jayasiri, +67 more
- 03 Nov 2015 - 
TL;DR: The present paper introduces the FoF database to the scientific community and briefly reviews some of the problems associated with classification and identification of the main fungal groups.
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Naming and outline of Dothideomycetes-2014 including proposals for the protection or suppression of generic names.

Nalin N. Wijayawardene, +56 more
- 04 Nov 2014 - 
TL;DR: This paper lists all genera currently accepted by us in Dothideomycetes, including pleomorphic and non-pleomorphic genera, and proposes single generic names for future usage, following the rulings of the current ICN.
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PIPITS: an automated pipeline for analyses of fungal internal transcribed spacer sequences from the Illumina sequencing platform

TL;DR: PIPITS is the first automated bioinformatics pipeline dedicated for fungal ITS sequences which incorporates ITSx to extract subregions of ITS and exploits the latest RDP Classifier to classify sequences against the curated UNITE fungal data set.
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Endophytic fungi associated with the temperate palm, Trachycarpus fortunei, within and outside its natural geographic range

TL;DR: The results obtained were comparable to those of previous studies of palm endophytes, but the assemblages showed more affinity with unrelated temperate hosts than with tropical palm hosts, and the relative importance of host and climate related processes was investigated.