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ERFBS
Interactive Report
Explore the data from the project including functional guild comparisons, species explorer, and more. Visit our project page to learn more about the Elwha River Fungal Biodiversity Survey.
440
OTUs Documented
(unique fungal taxa)
1,728
Observations
Across all sites
102
Observers
Contributing to the survey
About this Report

The Elwha River Fungal Biodiversity Survey (ERFBS) is an ongoing effort to document fungal diversity across the Elwha River watershed and former Lake Aldwell restoration landscape. Developed through a partnership between Biodiversity Collective and the Olympic Peninsula Fungi Festival, the project combines field surveys, DNA sequencing, and biodiversity research to better understand fungal communities in one of the Pacific Northwest's most dynamic recovering ecosystems.
 

Following dam removal and reservoir drainage, the former Lake Aldwell landscape has become a rapidly developing mosaic of newly exposed terrestrial habitat. ERFBS examines how fungal communities are distributed across this recovering ecosystem, with particular emphasis on ecological guild structure, ectomycorrhizal representation, and fungal community assembly within post-disturbance environments.
 

The ERFBS Species Explorer and associated datasets remain actively under development. Some taxonomic interpretations, ecological assignments, DNA validations, and descriptive content may continue to evolve as additional observations, sequence data, and curation workflows are incorporated into the project.

Elwha River, Olympic National Park, WA. Photo by David Rogers
Interactive Data Explorer

Explore interactive ecological and taxonomic visualizations generated through the ERFBS analytical workflow. These standardized datasets provide insight into fungal community composition, functional guild structure, OTU partitioning, and ecosystem recovery across the Elwha River restoration landscape.

Ecological Guild Comparison

Observation-weighted ecological guild composition differs substantially between FLARA and adjacent habitats. Reduced guild classifications generated through the OTU Builder workflow indicate greater saprotrophic dominance and reduced ectomycorrhizal representation within the former reservoir landscape relative to surrounding forest ecosystems. Clicking habitat labels within the legend will isolate individual datasets for comparison.

Featured Discoveries
Highlighting remarkable fungi documented in the Elwha River watershed and Former Lake Aldwell restoration area.
FEATURED OTU
Cortinarius vikingus
accepted
Recently Described
Cortinarius vikingus is a recently described ectomycorrhizal webcap associated with conifer-dominated forests of northern ecosystems. ERFBS collections represent what is believed to be the first documented observation of this species in the United States, extending its currently known distribution into the Pacific Northwest. 
Newly Described Species
DNA Sequenced
Ectomycorrhizal
cortinarius vikingus graham.jpg
Photo by Graham Steinruck
Species Explorer
The ERFBS Species Explorer functions as an interactive biodiversity interface linking OTU-level fungal records with ecological metadata, DNA sequence validation, taxonomic resources, and dynamic species pages. Use the full Species Explorer view to explore fungal diversity documented throughout the Elwha River restoration landscape.
Taxon Filters
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    Page 2
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Agaricus subrufescentoides

1
observation(s)
View Details ->
gilled
General saprotroph
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Aleuria sp. 'aurantia-PNW01'

2
observation(s)
View Details ->
orange peel fungus
cup/disc
General saprotroph
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Alnicola sp. 'luteolofibrillosa-PNW06'

1
observation(s)
View Details ->
gilled
ECM
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Alpova diplophloeus

1
observation(s)
View Details ->
enclosed
ECM
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Ecological guild interpretations are generated using FUNGuild and standardized through OTU Builder v1.0
About This Explorer
This interactive tool allows you to explore the fungal biodiversity documented through the Elwha River Fungal Biodiversity Survey (ERFBS). Data, taxonomy, and analyses are updated as the project evolves.
Note: Actively in Development
The ERFBS Species Explorer is an actively developing biodiversity resource. Some taxonomic interpretations, ecological assignments, and other content may continue to evolve as new data and sequence validations are incorporated.
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