skip page navigationOregon State University
Forestry:     Forest Engineering, Resources & Management | Forest Ecosystems & Society | Wood Science & Engineering
Department of Forest Science


Randy Molina
Randy Molina

Professor (Courtesy)
Forest Mycology

FSL 016
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR 97331
  • Office: FSL 016
  • Phone: 541-750-7391
  • Fax: 541-750-7329
  • B.S., 1973, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Ph.D., 1980, Oregon State University, Corvallis
Mycorrhizae; fungi in the forest ecosystem; soil microbial ecology.
  • Biodiversity, population and conservation biology of forest fungi; ecosystem functions of forest fungi.
  1. Molina, R., N. Vance, J. Weigand, D. Pilz, and M. Amaranthus. 1997. Special forest products: integrating social, economic, and biological considerations into adaptive ecosystem management, p. 315-336. In: K.A. Kohm and J.F. Franklin (eds.), Creating a Forestry for the 21st Century: the Science of Ecosystem Management. Island Press, Covelo, CA.
  2. Pilz, D. and R. Molina. 1996. Managing forest ecosystems to conserve fungal diversity and sustain wild mushroom harvests. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-371. Portland, OR: U.S.D.A., For. Serv., Pac. Northwest Res. Sta. 104 p.
  3. Molina, R., H. Massicotte, and J.M. Trappe. 1992. Specificity phenomena in mycorrhizal symbioses: community-ecological consequences and practical implications, p. 357-423. In: M.F. Allen (ed.), Mycorrhizal Functioning: An Integrative Plant-fungal Process. Chapman and Hall, NY.
  4. Perry, D.A., R. Molina, and M.P. Amaranthus. 1987. Mycorrhizae, mycorrhizospheres, and reforestation: current knowledge and research needs. Can. J. For. Res. 17(8):929-940.