Mycology & Symbiotic Systems
This category focuses on fungal cultivation and plant-fungal symbiosis, especially methods involving ectomycorrhizal fungi and their controlled association with trees. At present, the visible patent record in this category centers on a single invention family: Methods of cultivating ectomycorrhizal fungi. Google Patents result set shows the family in WO, US, AU, and CA records.
*Because patent protection is pursued separately in different territories, related inventions may appear across multiple jurisdictions. Each filing reflects a distinct examination process and legal pathway.
Ectomycorrhizal Cultivation Methods
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​​This invention family concerns methods of inoculating a tree with an ectomycorrhizal fungus by contacting one or more non-terrestrial adventitious roots under suitable conditions for inoculation. The Google Patents records show a granted U.S. patent, a granted Australian patent, a Canadian publication-stage filing, and the PCT publication.
Granted patents
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United States — US11206802B2
Granted U.S. patent. Google Patents lists the legal status as active and shows it as the granted U.S. record in this family; it also lists US20180359982A1 as another version.
Australia — AU2016367640B2
Granted Australian patent. Google Patents lists the legal status as active and shows AU2016367640A1 as another version.
Published applications and public filings
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International — WO2017098509A1
PCT publication for the family. Google Patents lists the PCT application as PCT/IL2016/051310, with English and French language versions shown.
Canada — CA3007336A1
Canadian publication-stage record. Google Patents lists the legal status as pending and shows English and French language versions.
United States — US20180359982A1
Published U.S. application corresponding to the later granted U.S. patent.
Australia — AU2016367640A1
Published Australian application corresponding to the later granted Australian patent.
Closing note
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This page presents jurisdiction-specific records within a single mycology-focused invention family. Although the underlying invention is the same, each filing reflects a distinct examination process and legal pathway in a different territory.
