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Whiskeytown National Recreational AreaA cup fungus growing in oak leaf litter
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Whiskeytown National Recreational Area
Fungi
Mushroom field trip participants identifying specimens
NPS Photo
Mushroom field trip participants identifying specimens.
Mushrooms
Whiskeytown is home to a wide variety of mushroom species, but a complete inventory has not yet been conducted. With the help of Dr. Susan Libonati-Barnes and her students from Shasta College, park staff and visitors are learning much more about these essential members of the park's forest communities.
 
Turkey tail fungus on a log in the park
NPS Photo
Turkey tail fungus (Trametes versicolor) is a common decay fungus in Whiskeytown.
Tree Diseases and Decay Fungi
Native tree diseases and decay fungi are common in Whiskeytown. In 2005, Dr. Robert Mathiasen of Northern Arizona University conducted an extensive inventory of root, rust, and foliage diseases; blights; stem decays; mistletoes; and bacterial tree diseases as part of the Sabbatical in the Parks program. This inventory documented 21 native and 2 non-native disease species in the park.
View of the Northside Canal looking towards the Monument  

Did You Know?
The most notable topographic feature at the Minidoka Relocation Center site is the wide meandering man-made North Side Canal. For the most part, the canal formed the southern boundary of the 33,000-acre relocation center reserve.

Last Updated: July 25, 2006 at 00:22 EST