May 20, 2016: The results obtained from the first survey for myxomycetes in the hyperarid areas of Peru, have just been published in the journal Anales del Jardín Botánico de Madrid. This study shows that these areas, despite the extreme weather conditions, are rich in myxomycetes and host a unique species assemblage. Among almost 80 species recorded, most of them belonging to the order Physarales, there is a new species to Science. Check it out.
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New year, new sampling trip (to the amazing Salares of Chile)
January 19, 2022: To get off with a good start for the New Year, several members of the Myxotropic [...]
What a welcoming month!
December 1, 2021: This month we are very glad to welcome Giulia Magri Ribeiro, a predoctoral student from the [...]
Members of the Myxotropic project describe a misidentified nivicolous species: the importance of combining morphological and molecular data.
December 1, 2021: A new nivicolous myxomycete species, Didymium pseudonivicola, has just been described as result of a comprehensive [...]
Successful first edition of “Protist eDNA – Bio-informatics workshop”.
November 30, 2021: More than 170 people from 25 countries participated in the first edition of “Protist eDNA – Bio-informatics [...]