Boddy was appointed a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Bath.[when?] Boddy subsequently joined Cardiff University in 1983, where she worked on antagonistic interactions, mycelia and fungal communities.[6][7] Fungal communities impact the decay rate of wood. She studied how neural networks could be used to analyse flow cytometry data from phytoplankton.[8] She is interested in how fungi fight with each other as they investigate the forest floor.[9] Boddy identified that fungi battle each other by producing inhibitory chemicals that can be transmitted through the air, equivalent to the poisonous gas produced during World War I.[10] Her research on fighting fungi was featured in New Scientist.[11]
Boddy leads the Fungal Ecology Group at Cardiff University.[12] She looked at the decomposition of coarse woody debris.[13] Boddy has studied the role of fungi in carbon and nutrient cycling.[14] Boddy has studied priority effects during the establishment of fungal communities in wood.[15] She found that abiotic variables impact the fungal interactions of beech wood, and that fungal combative abilities were sensitive to the ambient temperature.[16] She demonstrated that differences in the abiotic factors between sites can cause variation in the impact of priority effects in wood decay communities.[17] In 2008 Boddy argued in The Guardian that fungi were humankind's most invaluable species.[18] She claims that without fungi, land-based ecosystems, including humans, would not exist.[18]
Rayner, A.D.; Boddy, Lynne (1995). Fungal decomposition of wood : its biology and ecology. Wiley. ISBN978-0471103103. OCLC487040189.
Frankland, Juliet C.; Van West, P.; Boddy, Lynne (2008). Ecology of saprotrophic basidiomycetes. Elsevier Academic Press. OCLC243828240.
Ainsworth, Martyn; Boddy, Lynne; Coleman, Max (2010). From another kingdom : the amazing world of fungi. Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh. ISBN9781906129675. OCLC920233370.
Watkinson, Sarah C.; Boddy, Lynne; Money, Nicholas P. (7 January 2016). The fungi (Third ed.). Waltham, MA. ISBN978-0123820341. OCLC932528410.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Boddy, Lynne (2001). "Fungal Community Ecology and Wood Decomposition Processes in Angiosperms: From Standing Tree to Complete Decay of Coarse Woody Debris". Ecological Bulletins (49): 43โ56. JSTOR20113263.