A national trade association representing the growers, processors and marketers of cultivated mushrooms. Membership is open to anyone interested in the mushroom industry.
The Society works to support the conservation of lichens, and to raise awareness on their role as indicators of environmental health. They produce the Lichen Database contains over 2.3M records of specimens found in Great Britain.
The organization works to advance fungal biology research, conservation and education. Members can apply for research grants, as well as stipends for conference/workshop participation.
Members include medical mycologists, clinical scientists and researchers with interest in fungal diseases. The Society publishes Medical Mycology and Medical Mycology Case Reports (MMCR; Open Access).
MMSA was founded in 1967 to bring medical mycologists together into one central organization. MMSA publishes the Open Access publication Journal of Fungi.
Founded in 1908, NMV holds national meetings and host data collection excursions for the membership of amateur and professional mycologists. The website is in Dutch; some pages are in English.
The Society promotes the interest in lichens in the Nordic countries (Finland, Denmark, Latvia, etc.). It also publishes the journal Graphis Scripta twice per year.
The Collections are part of the Mycology and Nematology Genetic Diversity and Biology Laboratory, ARS-USDA. Includes access to several several fungal databases.
An international nomenclature repository coordinated and supported by the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, Landcare Research-NZ and the Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Science.
A collaboration of research centers, museums, libraries and professional and citizen scientists to build and share biodiversity knowledge. Sponsored by the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.
Rules and recommendations dealing with the formal botanical names for fungi and other organisms. Formerly the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature; revised in 2018.
A site for amateur and professional mycologists to record observations and help people identify fungi, including mushrooms, lichens, rust and molds as well as fungus-like organisms such as slime-molds.