756 results on '"polypore"'
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2. Molecular phylogeny and morphology of the genus Fuscoporia (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota) and reveal three new species of the F. ferrea group.
- Author
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Chen, Qian, Chen, Han, Luo, Cheng-Hang, and Lai, Xiao-Hong
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PHYLOGENY , *SETAE , *BASIDIOMYCOTA , *MORPHOLOGY , *SPECIES , *WOOD-decaying fungi - Abstract
Fuscoporia is a polypore genus of Hymenochaetaceae that causes wood decay, although some species in the genus have medicinal values. Phylogenetic analyses of concatenated ITS1-5.8S-ITS2-nLSU sequence data and morphological features identified three new species, F. eucalypticola, F. resupinata and F. subtropica from Australia, China and Malaysia, and these new species derived from the Fuscoporia ferrea group. These three species are illustrated and described. A key to resupinate species of Fuscoporia without mycelial setae in the world is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. The influence of resource patch condition and size on social interactions, reproductive behaviors, and oviposition in a fungivorous beetle.
- Author
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Fornof, Lillian J., Stahlmann Roeder, Clara A., Brodie III, Edmund D., and Formica, Vincent A.
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ANIMAL sexual behavior ,WOOD-decaying fungi ,FRUITING bodies (Fungi) ,SOCIAL interaction ,TENEBRIONIDAE - Abstract
Variation among resource patches can structure spatial patterns of social behavior. Individual preferences and requirements for heterogeneous resources can lead to differences in where behaviors take place and which kinds of individuals interact. In this study we examined whether properties of habitat patches predict presence of and interactions among wild forked fungus beetles (Bolitotherus cornutus). B. cornutus use shelf-like fruiting bodies of wood decaying fungi (brackets) as social arenas, courtship and mating sites, oviposition locations, and food sources. Brackets on a single log vary in size and condition and represent a dynamic resource as individual brackets decay over the years that they persist on a subpopulation. We found that size and condition significantly predicted how a bracket was used by B. cornutus. Both males and females were found more often on larger, living brackets. Larger brackets hosted proportionally more social interactions and mating behaviors relative to the overall visitation by individuals. The relationship between these resource properties and frequencies of behaviors was stronger for reproductive, between-sex social interactions. Live brackets also attracted more oviposition events by females, but bracket size had no effect on this behavior. Our results indicate that the dynamics of growth and aging of a critical resource can impact how social and reproductive behaviors are distributed in time and space, which in turn could affect the social structure of subpopulations. Significance statement: Species that depend on critical host resources are often faced with a patchy landscape of resource quality. Those patches represent the infrastructure within which social behaviors take place, and can have formative effects on where, when, and how social interactions occur. We demonstrated that the size and condition of a fungal resource predicted male and female forked fungus beetle presence and behavior. Larger, living brackets hosted more beetles overall, while larger brackets in any condition hosted more social interactions and mating behaviors. Female beetles were more likely to lay eggs on living brackets, regardless of size. This study demonstrates how ecological dynamics of aging resource patches can indirectly structure social landscapes by influencing where and how individuals interact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Coltricia raigadensis (Hymenochaetaceae, Basidiomycota), a new species from India.
- Author
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Patil, Prashant B., Vaidya, Sharda, Maurya, Satish, and Yadav, Lal Sahab
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RECOMBINANT DNA , *PHYLOGENY , *BASIDIOSPORES , *BASIDIOMYCOTA , *MORPHOLOGY - Abstract
A new species of Coltricia, C. raigadensis is described from tropical region of Maharashtra, India. The species is recognized on the basis of morphological characteristics and phylogenetic analyses using rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2, partial 28S rDNA and partial 18S rDNA sequences. Coltricia raigadensis is characterized by centrally stipitate basidiocarps, adpressed velutinate to tomentose pileal surface, small pores (2–4 per mm), globose to subglobose, thick walled basidiospores measuring 5.6–7 × 5–6.64 μm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Two new species of Perenniporia sensu lato (Polyporales, Basidiomycota) from China and two new combinations in Crassisporus.
- Author
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Wang, Chao-Ge, Chen, Jian, Liu, Hong-Gao, Dai, Yu-Cheng, and Yuan, Yuan
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BASIDIOMYCOTA , *SPECIES , *BASIDIOSPORES , *DNA sequencing , *WOOD-decaying fungi - Abstract
Phylogenetic and morphological analyses on Perenniporia s.l. were carried out. Phylogenies on Perenniporia s.l. are reconstructed with two loci DNA sequences including the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions and the large subunit (nLSU). Two new species from Yunnan Province, southwest China, Perenniporia prunicola and P. rosicola in Perenniporia s.l., are illustrated and described. Perenniporia prunicola is characterised by the perennial and resupinate basidiomata with a clay pink pore surface when fresh, a trimitic hyphal system, the presence of clavate to fusiform hymenial cystidia, ellipsoid to broadly ellipsoid basidiospores measuring 4.8–6.2 × 3.6–4.5 µm. Perenniporia rosicola is characterised by annual and resupinate basidiomata with a white pore surface when fresh, a dimitic hyphal system, the presence of dendrohyphidia, broadly ellipsoid to subglobose basidiospores measuring 5–5.8 × 4–5.2 μm. In addition, Crassisporus is a genus in Perenniporia s.l., in which two new combinations Crassisporus minutus and C. mollissimus are proposed. Main morphological characteristics of species related to new taxa are also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. 集毛孔菌属(担子菌门锈革孔菌科)一新种和该属 中国种类鉴定检索表.
- Author
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张婧仪, 罗凯月, 员瑗, and 边禄森
- Abstract
Copyright of Mycosystema is the property of Mycosystema Editorial Board and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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7. Molecular and morphological data reveal two new species of Tropicoporus (Hymenochaetaceae, Basidiomycota) from Australia and tropical Asia.
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Zhu, An-Hong, Liu, Zhan-Bo, Li, Yue, Liu, Hong-Gao, Yuan, Yuan, and He, Shuang-Hui
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BASIDIOMYCOTA , *SPECIES , *GENETIC markers , *BASIDIOSPORES , *WOOD-decaying fungi - Abstract
Phylogenetic analyses and morphological examination confirmed two new species in the tropical polypore genus Tropicoporus, T. oceanianus and T. zuzaneae, from Australia and tropical Asia, respectively. A phylogenetic analysis based on the two DNA markers including the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and the large subunit (nLSU) gene shows that these two new species form two independent lineages nested in the genus Tropicoporus. T. oceanianus is characterized by perennial and ungulate basidiomata, the occasional presence of hymenial setae, a trimitic hyphal structure in the context and a dimitic hyphal system in the trama, and broadly ellipsoid to subglobose basidiospores measuring 5.2–6 × 4–5 μm. T. zuzaneae is characterized by perennial and resupinate basidiomata with distinct receding margin, glancing pores, very thin to almost lacking subiculum, a dimitic hyphal structure, the absence of any setal elements, broadly ellipsoid to subglobose basidiospores measuring 3.8–4.9 × 3–4.2 µm. The differences among the new species and their phylogenetically related and morphologically similar species are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Bioprospecting of Selected Species of Polypore Fungi from the Western Balkans.
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Kozarski, Maja, Klaus, Anita, Špirović-Trifunović, Bojana, Miletić, Srdjan, Lazić, Vesna, Žižak, Željko, and Vunduk, Jovana
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PHENOL oxidase , *BIOPROSPECTING , *EDIBLE mushrooms , *GANODERMA lucidum , *HYDROXYBENZOIC acid , *SPECIES , *FUNGI - Abstract
Growing mushrooms means meeting challenges while aiming for sustainability and circularity. Wherever the producer is located, commercial strains are the same originating from several producers. Customized strains adapted to local conditions are urgently needed. Before introducing new species to the strain development pipeline, the chemical characterization and biological activity of wild ones need to be assessed. Accordingly, the mycoceutical potential of five polypore mushroom species from Serbia was evaluated including: secondary metabolite composition, oxidative damage prevention, anti-tyrosinase, and anti-angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE). The phenolic pattern was comparable in all samples, but the amounts of specific chemicals varied. Hydroxybenzoic acids were the primary components. All samples had varying quantities of ascorbic acid, carotene, and lycopene, and showed a pronounced inhibition of lipid peroxidation (LPx) and ability to scavenge HO•. Extracts were more potent tyrosinase inhibitors but unsuccessful when faced with ACE. Fomitopsis pinicola had the strongest anti-tumor efficacy while Ganoderma lucidum demonstrated strong selectivity in anti-tumor effect in comparison to normal cells. The evaluated species provided a solid foundation for commercial development while keeping local ecology in mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. A revised genus-level classification for Cerrenaceae (Polyporales, Agaricomycetes).
- Author
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Miettinen, O., Vlasák, J., Larsson, E., Vlasák Jr., J., Seelan, J. S. S., Hernawati, Levicky, Q., Larsson, K.-H., and Spirin, V.
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PATHOGENIC fungi , *POLYPORACEAE , *ROOT rots , *FUNGAL genetics , *MACROFUNGI - Abstract
Cerrenaceae is a small family of polypores and hydnoid fungi in the order Polyporales (Basidiomycota). The family consists of white-rot fungi, some of which are serious tree pathogens. Combining morphological evidence with a phylogenetic dataset of six genetic markers, we revise generic concepts in the family and propose a seven-genus classification system for the family. Two genera are introduced as new: the monotypic Acanthodontia for Radulodon cirrhatinus, and Lividopora for the Rigidoporus vinctus complex. We re-introduce the name Somion for the Spongipellis delectans complex. Other recognized genera in the family are Cerrena, Irpiciporus, Pseudolagarobasidium, and Radulodon. New species introduced are Irpiciporus branchiformis from Tanzania, Lividopora armeniaca, and L. facilis from Southeast Asia, and Somion strenuum from East Asia. We provide nomenclatural comments on all the names combined to the above Cerrenaceae genera and typify Cerrena unicolor, C. zonata, Polyporus carneopallens (= L. vincta), Somion occarium, and S. unicolor. The genus Hyphoradulum belongs to Cystostereaceae (Agaricales), and we transfer the type species H. conspicuum to Crustomyces. Our study highlights the importance of integrating different basidiocarp types in analyses when revising genus classification in macrofungi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Phylloporia mutabilis sp. nov. from Benin, West Africa.
- Author
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Olou, B. A., Krah, F.-S., Piepenbring, M., and Yorou, N. S.
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HYMENOCHAETACEAE , *POLYPORACEAE , *PLANT diversity , *ANGIOSPERMS - Abstract
Phylloporia is a widespread genus of Hymenochaetales (Basidiomycota) with polyporoid basidiomata found mainly in the tropics. Species of Phylloporia are predominantly parasitic of woody plant hosts, while some species grow as saprotrophs. Data on the genus is still scarce for tropical Africa, where we expect a high diversity given the high plant diversity in this area. Two specimens of this genus were collected in Benin (West Africa) and analysed morphologically and phylogenetically based on a multigene dataset (ITS, LSU, EF1a). Strong support for a species new to science was found, described here as Phylloporia mutabilis. It differs from other Phylloporia species by stipitate, coriaceous basidiomata, earth coloured to dark brown when fresh and changing upon drying from golden to yellowish brown, the margin being large in young specimens, becoming narrower with maturity. Basidiomata of Phylloporia mutabilis grow on the soil under angiosperm trees in a dense dry forest, so its lifestyle (saprotrophic, parasitic or mycorrhizal) is not evident, and future ecological studies will be required to elucidate this aspect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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11. Prescribed fire is an effective restoration measure for increasing boreal fungal diversity.
- Author
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Ramberg, Ellinor, Berglund, Håkan, Penttilä, Reijo, Strengbom, Joachim, and Jönsson, Mari
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PRESCRIBED burning ,COARSE woody debris ,TREE felling ,FACTORIAL experiment designs ,TAIGAS ,FOREST productivity - Abstract
Intensive forestry practices have had a negative impact on boreal forest biodiversity; as a consequence, the need for restoration is pressing. Polypores (wood‐inhabiting fungi) are key decomposers of dead wood, but, due to a lack of coarse woody debris (CWD) in forest ecosystems, many species are under threat. Here, we study the long‐term effects on polypore diversity of two restoration treatments: creating CWD by felling whole trees and prescribed burning. This large‐scale experiment is located in spruce‐dominated boreal forests in southern Finland. The experiment has a factorial design (n = 3) including three levels of created CWD (5, 30, and 60 m3 ha−1) crossed with burning or no burning. In 2018, 16 years after launching the experiment, we inventoried polypores on 10 experimentally cut logs and 10 naturally fallen logs per stand. We found that overall polypore community composition differed between burned and unburned stands. However, only red‐listed species abundances and richness were positively affected by prescribed burning. We found no effects of CWD levels created mechanically by felling of trees. We show, for the first time, that prescribed burning is an effective measure for restoring polypore diversity in a late‐successional Norway spruce forest. Burning creates CWD with certain characteristics that differ from what is created by CWD restoration by felling trees. Prescribed burning promotes primarily red‐listed species, demonstrating its effectiveness as a restoration measure to promote diversity of threatened polypore species in boreal forests. However, because the CWD that the burning creates will decrease over time, to be functional, prescribed burns need to be applied regularly on the landscape scale. Large‐scale and long‐term experimental studies, such as this one, are invaluable for establishing evidence‐based restoration strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Taxonomic and phylogenetic contributions to Fuscoporia (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota): two new species from Hawaii with a key to North American species.
- Author
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Qian Chen, Lu Liu, Jing Si, and Vlasák, Josef
- Subjects
BASIDIOMYCOTA ,SPECIES ,BASIDIOSPORES ,WOOD-decaying fungi ,SETAE ,ELLIPSOIDS - Abstract
Fuscoporia is a cosmopolitan, poroid, wood-decaying genus, belonging to the Hymenochaetales. During a study of wood-inhabiting fungi in the USA, four unknown specimens were collected from Hawaii. Both morphological criteria and molecular genetic analyses based on the ITS+nLSU+EF1-a datasets and the nLSU dataset confirmed that these four specimens represent two new species of Fuscoporia, and they are described as F. hawaiiana and F. minutissima. Fuscoporia hawaiiana is characterized by pileate basidiocarps, the absence of cystidioles, hooked hymenial setae, broadly ellipsoid to subglobose basidiospores measuring 4-6 x 3.5-4.5 mm. Fuscoporia minutissima is distinguished by small pores (10-13 per mm) and basidiospores (3.4-4 X 2.4-3 mm). The taxonomic status of the two new species is briefly discussed. A key to the North American species of Fuscoporia is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Phylogeny and diversity of Rigidoporus (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota), including three new species from Asia.
- Author
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Chao-Ge Wang, Vlasák, Josef, Jin, Can, and Jing Si
- Subjects
PHYLOGENY ,BASIDIOMYCOTA ,SPECIES ,DNA sequencing ,WOOD-decaying fungi - Abstract
Phylogenetic and morphological analyses on Rigidoporus were carried out. The genus Rigidoporus (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota), typified by R. microporus (Fr.) Overeem. (synonym Polyporus micromegas Mont.), was established by Murrill in 1905. The genus is mainly characterized by annual to perennial, resupinate, effused-reflexed to pileate or stipitate basidiomata with azonate or concentrically zonate and sulcate upper surface, a monomitic to pseudo-dimitic hyphal structure, simple-septate generative hyphae, and ellipsoid to globose basidiospores. Phylogeny on species of the genus is reconstructed with two loci DNA sequences including the internal transcribed spacer regions and the large subunit. Three new species in Rigidoporus are described and illustrated from Asia, and one new combination in the genus is proposed. The main morphological characteristics of the currently accepted species of Rigidoporus are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. New records and barcode sequence data of wood-inhabiting polypores in Benin with notes on their phylogenetic placements and distribution.
- Author
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Olou, B. A., Langer, E., Ryvarden, L., Krah, F.-S., Hounwanou, G. B., Piepenbring, M., and Yorou, N. S.
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POLYPORACEAE , *FUNGAL phylogeny , *FUNGAL morphology , *TAXONOMY , *FOREST management - Abstract
Wood-inhabiting fungi (WIF), such as polypores, are extremely species-rich and play vital roles in the functioning of forest ecosystems as decomposers. Despite the importance of polypores, our knowledge of the diversity and distribution of these fungi is still poor in general and especially for West Africa. To advance our knowledge we here summarise results from field collections between 2017 and 2021 and present (i) a taxonomic overview, (ii) phylogenetic placements and (iii) an illustrated catalogue of wood-inhabiting polypore fungi with colour pictures. During the field sampling campaigns, we collected 647 specimens. Based on morphological characteristics and molecular barcode data, 76 polypore species belonging to six orders, 15 families and 39 genera were identified. Of the 76 species, 30 are new to the West Africa, 69 new to Benin, and two new combinations Fuscoporia beninensis and Megasporia minuta are proposed. With this summary, we provide new data for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. 肉质黑孢孔菌生物学特性, 驯化栽培及急性毒性 .
- Author
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顾丹丹, 史玲玉, 张金秀, 王美华, 邓晓晴, and 王立安
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POTASSIUM dihydrogen phosphate ,ACUTE toxicity testing ,MAGNESIUM sulfate ,YEAST extract ,FRUITING bodies (Fungi) ,CORN flour - Abstract
Copyright of Mycosystema is the property of Mycosystema Editorial Board and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Taxonomy and phylogeny of Sidera (Hymenochaetales, Rickenella clade) from China and North America revealing two new species.
- Author
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Zhan-Bo Liu, Hong-Min Zhou, Hong-Gao Liu, and Yuan Yuan
- Subjects
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PHYLOGENY , *SPECIES , *BASIDIOSPORES , *WOOD-decaying fungi , *SPRUCE - Abstract
Sidera, belonging to the Rickenella clade of Hymenochaetales, is a worldwide genus with mostly poroid hymenophore of wood-inhabiting fungi. Two new species in the genus, Sidera americana and S. borealis, are described and illustrated from China and North America based on morphological and molecular evidence. They were mainly found growing on rotten wood of Abies, Picea and Pinus. S. americana is characterized by annual, resupinate basidiomata with silk sheen when dry, round pores (9-11 per mm), a dimitic hyphal system, and allantoid basidiospores measuring 3.5-4.2 × 1 µm. S. borealis is characterized by annual, resupinate basidiomata with cream to pinkish buff dry pore surface, angular pores (6-7 per mm), a dimitic hyphal system, and allantoid basidiospores measuring 3.9-4.1 × 1-1.1 µm. Phylogenetic analysis based on a combined 2-locus dataset [ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 (ITS) + nuclear large subunit RNA (nLSU)] shows that the two species are members of Sidera, and they are compared with morphologically similar and phylogenetically related species, respectively. An identification key to 18 accepted species of Sidera in worldwide is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. The phylogenetic analysis of Armenian collections of medicinal tinder polypore Fomes fomentarius (Agaricomycetes, Polyporaceae)
- Author
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Susanna Badalyan, Elena Zhuykova, and Victor Mukhin
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armenia ,cryptic ,fomes inzengae ,fomes fomentarius sensu stricto ,its barcoding ,polypore ,sympatric ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
The medicinal tinder polypore Fomes fomentarius is widely distributed in all floristic regions of Armenia on different woody substrates. The phylogenetic analysis of Armenian collections using ITS barcoding revealed that it is taxonomically complex species represented by sublineages A2 and B2 (in ratio 1:1) of European phylogenetic lineages A and B, which correspond to two cryptic sympatric species F. fomentarius sensu stricto and F. inzengae, respectively. These species are phylogenetically almost equidistant from Fomes fasciatus by the level of nucleotide divergence (6.75% and 7.17%, respectively). Nucleotide divergence between these two species is 1.85% which does not exceed the average level of intraspecific ITS variability in basidiomycetes fungi (3.33%). It is suggesting that F. fomentarius s.s. and F. inzengae are possibly not taxonomically separate species, but sympatric cryptic subspecies of F. fomentarius sensu lato. Both taxa significantly differ by their ecology and distribution: F. fomentarius s.s. is mainly found on Betula spp. trees and widespread in temperate forests, while F. inzengae has been recorded on Carpinus sp., Fagus sp., Populus sp. and other deciduous trees in subtropical latitudes. In Armenia, F. fomentarius s.s. was found on Fagus sp. and Quercus sp., while F. inzengae - on Carpinus sp., Juglans sp., Fagus sp., Populus sp., and Salix sp. trees. Although the species rank of Mediterranean subtropical species F. inzengae remains disputable it has been originally described for the mycobiota of Armenia.
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- 2022
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18. An Updated Phylogenetic Assessment and Taxonomic Revision of Perenniporia sensu lato (Polyporales, Basidiomycota).
- Author
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Ji, Xing, Sun, Yi-Fei, Wu, Dong-Mei, Gao, Neng, and Cui, Bao-Kai
- Subjects
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BASIDIOMYCOTA , *RIBOSOMAL RNA , *PHYLOGENY , *MOLECULAR phylogeny , *DNA sequencing , *POLYPORACEAE - Abstract
Perenniporia is an important genus of Polyporaceae. In its common acceptation, however, the genus is polyphyletic. In this study, phylogenetic analyses on a set of Perenniporia species and related genera were carried out using DNA sequences of multiple loci, including the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, the large subunit nuclear ribosomal RNA gene (nLSU), the small subunit mitochondrial rRNA gene (mtSSU), the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF1) and the b-tubulin gene (TBB1). Based on morphology and phylogeny, 15 new genera, viz., Aurantioporia, Citrinoporia, Cystidioporia, Dendroporia, Luteoperenniporia, Macroporia, Macrosporia, Minoporus, Neoporia, Niveoporia, Rhizoperenniporia, Tropicoporia, Truncatoporia, Vanderbyliella, and Xanthoperenniporia, are proposed; 2 new species, Luteoperenniporia australiensis and Niveoporia subrusseimarginata, are described; and 37 new combinations are proposed. Illustrated descriptions of the new species are provided. Identification keys to Perenniporia and its related genera and keys to the species of these genera are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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19. Two new species of Hymenochaetaceae from tropical Asia and America.
- Author
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Meng Zhou, Xiao-Hong Ji, Hong-Gao Liu, Miller, Kurt, Yuan Yuan, and Vlasák, Josef
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SPECIES ,SURFACE cracks ,BASIDIOSPORES ,HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) ,WOOD-decaying fungi - Abstract
Two new species in Hymenochaetaceae, Fulvifomes acaciae and Pyrrhoderma nigra, are illustrated and described from tropical Asia and America based on morphology and phylogenetic analyses. F. acaciae is characterized by perennial, pileate, and woody hard basidiomata when fresh; ash gray to dark gray, encrusted, concentrically sulcate, and irregularly cracked pileal surface; circular pores of 7–8 per mm with entire dissepiments; a dimitic hyphal system in trama and context; absence of setal element and presence of cystidioles; and broadly ellipsoid, yellowish brown, thick-walled, and smooth basidiospores measuring 5–6 μm × 4–5 μm. P. nigra is characterized by perennial and resupinate basidiomata with dark gray to almost black pore surface when fresh; small and circular pores of 7–9 per mm, a monomitic hyphal system with generative hyphae simple septate, hyphoid setae dominant in subiculum but not in tube trama, and absence of cystidia; and ellipsoid, hyaline, thin-walled basidiospores measuring 4–5 μm × 3–3.6 μm. The differences between the new species and morphologically similar and phylogenetically related species are discussed. Keys to Fulvifomes and Pyrrhoderma have also been provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Two new species of Fistulina (Agaricales, Basidiomycota) from the Northern Hemisphere.
- Author
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Meng Zhou, Zhan-Bo Liu, Young Woon Lim, Yoonhee Cho, Rui-Heng Yang, Da-Peng Bao, Chang-Lin Zhao, De-Wei Li, Vlasák, Josef, and Yu-Cheng Dai
- Abstract
Phylogenetic and morphological analyses on samples of Fistulina from East Asia and North America were carried out, and two new species were described, namely, Fistulina americana and Fistulina orientalis, both previously known as Fistulina hepatica. The former is characterized by lateral stipitate basidiocarps, relatively small pores (7–8 per mm), a monomitic hyphal system with both clamp connections and simple septa, and ellipsoid basidiospores of 4–4.8 × 3–3.3 µm, and the species has been found on Quercus in North-East USA. F. orientalis is characterized by lateral stipitate basidiocarps, very small pores (11–12 per mm) with pruinose dissepiments, a monomitic hyphal system with both clamp connections and simple septa, and ovoid to subglobose basidiospores of 3–4 × 2.7–3 µm, and the species has been found on Castanopsis in East Asia. Phylogenetically, samples of F. americana and F. orientalis form two new lineages nested in the Fistulina clade. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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21. Taxonomic update of species closely related to Fulvifomes robiniae in America.
- Author
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Salvador-Montoya, Carlos Alberto, Martínez, Mariana, and Drechsler-Santos, Elisandro Ricardo
- Abstract
Fulvifomes robiniae is a parasitic polypore with distribution in temperate zones of North America. However, specimens morphologically similar to F. robiniae are found in other parts of the Americas. In addition, species such as F. cedrelae and F. coffeatoporus are related to F. robiniae in morphology. In this work, the type material of F. cedrelae, F. centroamericanus, F. coffeatoporus, F. krugiodendri, F. swieteniae and F. robiniae was revised. Furthermore, phylogenetic inferences of species studied were performed. Based on our results, F. swieteniae and F. centroamericanus are synonymized to F. cedrelae and F. krugiodendri to F. coffeatoporus. Also, F. cedrelae and F. coffeatoporus are confirmed as species distinct from F. robiniae based on molecular data and epitypes are selected. Additionally, specimens that resemble F. robiniae were found in northern Argentina and found to be a distinct new species, F. popoffii sp. nov., based on morphological, molecular, and ecological data. Illustrations, taxonomic analyses and discussion of selected species are presented, and a key to the Fulvifomes species is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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22. Two new forest pathogens in Phaeolus (Polyporales, Basidiomycota) on Chinese coniferous trees were confirmed by molecular phylogeny.
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Yuan Yuan, Ying-Da Wu, Ya-Rong Wang, Meng Zhou, Jun-Zhi Qiu, De-Wei Li, Vlasák, Josef, Hong-Gao Liu, and Yu-Cheng Dai
- Subjects
MOLECULAR phylogeny ,BASIDIOMYCOTA ,COMMUNITY forests ,CONIFEROUS forests ,TREES ,PINACEAE - Abstract
Phaeolus schweinitzii (Fr.) Pat. was originally described in Europe and is considered a common forest pathogen on conifers in the Northern Hemisphere. Our molecular phylogeny based on samples from China, Europe, and North America confirms that P. schweinitzii is a species complex, including six taxa. P. schweinitzii sensu stricto has a distribution in Eurasia; the samples from Northeast and Southwest China are distantly related to P. schweinitzii sensu stricto, and two new species are described after morphological, phylogenetic, and geographical analyses. The species growing on Larix, Picea, and Pinus in Northeast China is described as Phaeolus asiae-orientalis. Another species mostly occurring on Pinus yunnanensis in Southwest China is Phaeolus yunnanensis. In addition, three taxa distributed in North America differ from P. schweinitzii sensu stricto. Phaeolus tabulaeformis (Berk.) Pat. is in Southeast North America, "P. schweinitzii-1" in Northeast North America, and "P. schweinitzii-2" in western North America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Wood-inhabiting macrofungi Hymenochaetales and Polyporales (Basidiomycota) in the Amazon Forest: relationship the abiotic factors and substrate colonization
- Author
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DOUGLAS M. COUCEIRO and SHEYLA REGINA M. COUCEIRO
- Subjects
Amazon ,ecology ,funga ,fungi assemblage ,polypore ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Hymenochaetales and Polyporales are important macrofungi for the maintenance of tropical forests, since they act directly in the nutrient cycling of the wood decomposition. In the Amazon, the largest tropical forest in the world, knowledge about Agaricomycetes is still insipient, since many areas have not yet been inventoried and new records appear each new study. To increase ecological knowledge about the Hymenochaetales and Polyporales, in the Brazilian Amazon region, collections were conducted in western Pará, Brazil, relating these fungi to the substrate they colonize and to environmental variables. 91 species were identified, with greater macrofungi richness associated with the rainy season; these fungi showed preferences for dead woods, of small diameter (class 1 = 5,9 ˫ 39 cm) and, in stages of decomposition still rigid or intermediate. The abundance and richness of Hymenochaetales and Polyporales were influenced by air humidity and the assemblage composition was influenced by temperature, air humidity and rainfall. The results indicate a rich diversity for western Pará region, these species are associated with environmental conditions, and may be threatened by the increasing pressure of human activity in the Brazilian Amazon.
- Published
- 2022
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24. How important is Forest Age in explaining the species composition of Near-natural Spruce Forests?
- Author
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Handegard, Eivind, Gjerde, Ivar, Halvorsen, Rune, Lewis, Robert, Storaunet, Ken Olaf, Sætersdal, Magne, and Skarpaas, Olav
- Subjects
FOREST succession ,FORESTS & forestry ,TREE age ,NORWAY spruce ,FOREST management - Abstract
Multiple ecological drivers, along with forest age, determine the species composition of boreal forest ecosystems. However, the role of age in successional changes in forests cannot be understood without taking site conditions, the disturbance regime and forest structure into account. In this study, we ask two research questions: 1. What is the relationship between forest age and overall species composition in older near-natural spruce forests, i.e. forests of age beyond harvest maturity? 2. Do species associated with different forest habitats respond similarly to variation in forest age? Data were collected in 257 Norway spruce dominated 0.25 ha plots from three study areas in Southeastern and Central Norway. Species inventories were conducted for lichens and bryophytes on trees and rocks, vascular plants on the forest floor, and for deadwood-associated bryophytes and polypore fungi. Although NMDS ordination analyses of the total species composition identified a main axis related to the age of the oldest trees in two of the study areas, variation partitioning analyses showed that age explained a small fraction of variation of the species composition compared to site conditions, logging history, forest structure, and differences between the sites in all habitats. The unique variation explained by forest age species was, however, significant for all habitats. The fraction of variation in species composition explained by forest age was the largest for lichens and bryophytes on trees, and for deadwood-associated bryophytes and polypore fungi. Our results suggest that practical mapping of near-natural forests for management purposes inventories should include site conditions, forest structure and between site differences in addition to forest age. [Display omitted] • Site conditions and forest structure explained most of the species composition. • There is unique variation in the species assemblages explained by age. • Age was most influential for epiphytes, deadwood-associated bryophytes and polypores. • Representative mapping of near-natural spruce forest should include age variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. Taxonomy and Multi-Gene Phylogeny of Poroid Panellus (Mycenaceae, Agaricales) With the Description of Five New Species From China.
- Author
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Qiu-Yue Zhang, Hong-Gao Liu, Viktor Papp, Meng Zhou, Fang Wu, and Yu-Cheng Dai
- Subjects
AGARICALES ,SPECIES ,BASIDIOSPORES ,PHYLOGENY ,WOOD-decaying fungi - Abstract
Panellus is an Agaricales genus with both lamellate and poroid hymenophore. The poroid species are readily overlooked because of their tiny basidiocarps. The Chinese samples of poroid Panellus are studied, and five species, namely Panellus alpinus, Panellus crassiporus, Panellus longistipitatus, Panellus minutissimus, and Panellus palmicola are described as new species based on morphology and molecular phylogenetic analyses inferred from an nrITS dataset and a multi-gene dataset (nrITS C nrLSU C mtSSU C nrSSU C tef1). Panellus alpinus is characterized by its round to ellipsoid pores measuring 4-6 per mm and oblong ellipsoid basidiospores measuring 4.8-6 mm x 2.8-3.6 mm; P. crassiporus differs from other poroid species in the genus by the irregular pores with thick dissepiments and globose basidiospores measuring 8-9.8 mm x 6.9-8 mm; P. longistipitatus is distinguished by its long stipes, pyriform cheilocystidia, and broadly ellipsoid to subglobose basidiospores measuring 7-9.8 mm x 5-7 mm; P. minutissimus is characterized by its tiny and gelatinous basidiocarps, 5-20 pores per basidiocarp, and ellipsoid basidiospores measuring 6-8 mm x 3.2-4.2 mm; P. palmicola is characterized by its round pores measuring 2-4 per mm, the presence of acerose basidioles, and globose basidiospores measuring 7-9.5 mm x 6.2-8.2 mm. An identification key to 20 poroid species of Panellus is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
26. Ganoderma meredithiae (Ganodermataceae), a new record for India
- Author
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Malik, Wasim Sajad, Nisa, Anees Un, Wani, Abdul Hamid, and Bhat, Mohd Yaqub
- Published
- 2023
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27. Two new species of Fulvifomes (Basidiomycota, Hymenochaetaceae) on threatened or near threatened tree species in Japan.
- Author
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Tsutomu Hattori, Yuko Ota, and Kozue Sotome
- Subjects
- *
ENDANGERED species , *BASIDIOMYCOTA , *SPECIES , *PHELLINUS , *BASIDIOSPORES - Abstract
We describe two new species of Fulvifomes based on morphological observations and phylogenetic investigations. Both species were identified as Phellinus rimosus by former mycologists, but both are morphologically distinct from authenticated specimen of P. rimosus. Fulvifomes boninensis is characterized by perennial basidiomata, a sulcate pileus surface becoming rimose, lack of a distinct crust on the pileus surface, subdimitic hyphal system in the context, and ellipsoid basidiospores. This species is endemic to the Bonin Islands, Japan, and is specific to the host Morus boninensis, a red-listed tree species. Fulvifomes imazekii is characterized by perennial basidiomata, sulcate and velutinous pileus surface, lack of a crust on the pileus surface, dimitic hyphal system in the context, and broadly ellipsoid basidiospores. This species is specific to Berchemiella berchemiaefolia, and is known only from Mt. Yokogura-yama, in Kochi Prefecture, Japan. Fulvifomes boninensis and F. imazekii are considered threatened, because of their high host specificity each with a threatened tree species as well as the limited distribution of the former and the extremely small number of "mature individuals" of the latter. The following new combinations were also proposed: Fulvifomes aulaxinus, F. pappianus, and F. tepperi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Species Diversity, Molecular Phylogeny, and Ecological Habits of Fomitopsis (Polyporales, Basidiomycota).
- Author
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Liu, Shun, Song, Chang-Ge, Xu, Tai-Min, Ji, Xing, Wu, Dong-Mei, and Cui, Bao-Kai
- Subjects
RIBOSOMAL DNA ,MOLECULAR phylogeny ,SPECIES diversity ,RNA polymerase II ,BASIDIOMYCOTA ,RIBOSOMAL RNA - Abstract
Fomitopsis is a worldwide brown-rot fungal genus of Polyporales, which grows on different gymnosperm and angiosperm trees and has important ecological functions and economic values. In this study, species diversity, phylogenetic relationships, and ecological habits of Fomitopsis were investigated. A total of 195 specimens from 24 countries representing 29 species of Fomitopsis were studied. Based on the morphological characters and phylogenetic evidence of DNA sequences including the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, the large subunit of nuclear ribosomal RNA gene (nLSU), the small subunit of nuclear ribosomal RNA gene (nSSU), the small subunit of mitochondrial rRNA gene (mtSSU), the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF), and the second subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB2), 30 species are accepted in Fomitopsis , including four new species: F. resupinata , F. srilankensis , F. submeliae and F. yimengensis. Illustrated descriptions of the novel species and the geographical locations of the Fomitopsis species are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Two New Species of Sidera (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota) from Southwest China.
- Author
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Liu, Zhan-Bo, Zhou, Meng, Wu, Fang, and Yu, Jian
- Subjects
- *
BASIDIOMYCOTA , *SPECIES , *BASIDIOSPORES , *WOOD-decaying fungi , *SALMON - Abstract
Two new wood-inhabiting fungi, Sidera salmonea sp. Nov. and S. tibetica sp. Nov. in the order Hymenochaetales from southwest China, are described and illustrated based on molecular and morphological evidence. They were found on gymnosperm wood that is rotten and charred. The characteristics of S. salmonea include annual, resupinate basidioma, salmon pores with distinctly white margins, angular pores (7–9 per mm), a dimitic hyphal system, and lunate basidiospores that are 3–3.5 × 0.9–1.1 μm. The characteristics of S. tibetica include annual, resupinate basidioma with a white to cream fresh pore surface that becomes cream to honey-yellow and shiny when dry, round pores (7–8 per mm), a dimitic hyphal system, and lunate basidiospores that measure 2.9–3.1 × 1–1.1 μm. A phylogenetic analysis based on the combined 2-locus dataset (5.8S + nuclear large subunit RNA (nLSU)) shows that the two species are members of the genus Sidera, and they are morphologically compared with related species, respectively. This paper provides a key to the identification of 16 accepted species of Sidera that are found throughout the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Three new Coltricia (Hymenochaetaceae, Basidiomycota) species from China based on morphological characters and molecular evidence.
- Author
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Bian, Lu-Sen, Zhou, Meng, and Yu, Jian
- Abstract
Three new species of Coltricia, C. fimbriata, C. lenis, and C. tenuihypha, are described from China based on both morphological and molecular data. Phylogenetic analyses based on rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 (ITS), 28S rDNA (LSU), 18S rDNA (SSU), mitochondrial 12S rDNA (mtSSU), RNA polymerase II subunits 1 (RPB1), and EF-1α (TEF1) confirmed the generic placement of the three new species. Coltricia fimbriata is characterized by centrally stipitate basidiocarps, thin and curled pileal margin with tufts of hairs, 1–3 pores per mm, and ellipsoid to broadly ellipsoid basidiospores (6.3–8.0 × 4.3–5.3 μm). Coltricia lenis is characterized by centrally stipitate basidiocarps, distinctly concentrically zonate and sulcate pileal surface, soft to spongy stipes when dry, 0.5–2 pores per mm, oblong-ellipsoid to ellipsoid basidiospores (7.0–9.3 × 4.5–5.8 μm). Coltricia tenuihypha is characterized by eccentrically to centrally basidiocarps, fan-shaped to circular pilei, 1–3 pores per mm, narrow and skeletal-alike hyphae present in the stipe, ellipsoid to broadly ellipsoid basidiospores (7.3–9.3 × 5.5–6.8 μm). An identification key to the species of Coltricia recorded in China is also provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Global diversity and systematics of Hymenochaetaceae with poroid hymenophore.
- Author
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Wu, Fang, Zhou, Li-Wei, Vlasák, Josef, and Dai, Yu-Cheng
- Abstract
Taxonomy and phylogeny of poroid Hymenochaetaceae based on the most comprehensive phylogenetic analyses are presented. A phylogeny based on a combined dataset of ITS and nLSU sequences for accepted genera of Hymenochaetaceae was analyzed and two or multigene phylogenies for most species of ten large genera including Coltricia, Fomitiporella, Fomitiporia, Fulvifomes, Fuscoporia, Inonotus, Phylloporia, Porodaedalea, Sanghuangporus and Tropicoporus, were carried out. Based on samples from 37 countries of five continents, seven new genera, Meganotus, Neophellinus, Nothonotus, Pachynotus, Perenninotus, Pseudophylloporia and Rigidonotus, are introduced, 37 new species, Coltricia tibetica, Fomitiporella crassa, F. queenslandica, Fomitiporia eucalypti, F. gatesii, F. ovoidospora, Fulvifomes azonatus, F. caligoporus, F. costaricense, F. floridanus, F. jouzaii, F. nakasoneae, F. subindicus, Fuscoporia sinuosa, F. submurina, Inonotus subradiatus, I. vietnamensis, Neomensularia castanopsidis, Pachynotus punctatus, Phellinus cuspidatus, P. subellipsoideus, Phylloporia minutissima, P. tabernaemontanae, Porodaedalea occidentiamericana, P. orientoamericana, P. qilianensis, P. schrenkianae, Pseudophylloporia australiana, Sanghuangporus australianus, S. lagerstroemiae, Tropicoporus angustisulcatus, T. hainanicus, T. lineatus, T. minus, T. ravidus, T. substratificans and T. tenuis, are described, and 108 new combinations are proposed. In addition, one illegitimate name and two invalid names are renamed, and Coltricia and Coltriciella were synonymized. The taxonomic relevance and limits of the new taxa are discussed. Photos and illustrations for 37 new species are presented, and a full description for each new species is given. Eventually, this study recognizes 672 species in 34 genera and provides a modern treatment of the poroid Hymenochaetaceae in the world. A key to the accepted poroid genera of Hymenochaetaceae is provided, and identification keys to the accepted species of 32 poroid genera worldwide are given. A synopsis description of each species is included in these keys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Species Diversity, Molecular Phylogeny, and Ecological Habits of Fomitopsis (Polyporales, Basidiomycota)
- Author
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Shun Liu, Chang-Ge Song, Tai-Min Xu, Xing Ji, Dong-Mei Wu, and Bao-Kai Cui
- Subjects
brown-rot fungi ,distribution areas ,multi-gene phylogeny ,new species ,polypore ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Fomitopsis is a worldwide brown-rot fungal genus of Polyporales, which grows on different gymnosperm and angiosperm trees and has important ecological functions and economic values. In this study, species diversity, phylogenetic relationships, and ecological habits of Fomitopsis were investigated. A total of 195 specimens from 24 countries representing 29 species of Fomitopsis were studied. Based on the morphological characters and phylogenetic evidence of DNA sequences including the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, the large subunit of nuclear ribosomal RNA gene (nLSU), the small subunit of nuclear ribosomal RNA gene (nSSU), the small subunit of mitochondrial rRNA gene (mtSSU), the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF), and the second subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB2), 30 species are accepted in Fomitopsis, including four new species: F. resupinata, F. srilankensis, F. submeliae and F. yimengensis. Illustrated descriptions of the novel species and the geographical locations of the Fomitopsis species are provided.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Factors influencing the rate of formation of tree‐related microhabitats and implications for biodiversity conservation and forest management.
- Author
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Courbaud, Benoit, Larrieu, Laurent, Kozak, Daniel, Kraus, Daniel, Lachat, Thibault, Ladet, Sylvie, Müller, Jörg, Paillet, Yoan, Sagheb‐Talebi, Khosro, Schuck, Andreas, Stillhard, Jonas, Svoboda, Miroslav, and Zudin, Sergey
- Subjects
- *
FOREST biodiversity , *FOREST conservation , *FOREST management , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *DEAD trees , *FOREST dynamics , *TREE growth - Abstract
The retention of trees bearing tree‐related microhabitats (TreMs) has become an important means of conserving biodiversity in production forests. However, we lack estimates of TreM formation rates and evidence on factors driving TreM formation.Based on the observation of 80,099 living trees from 19 species groups in Europe and Iran, we estimated the probability of TreM occurrence on trees and the associated rate of first TreM formation as a function of tree DBH, management, tree species group and random site effects. We built a separate model for each of 11 TreM groups.The hazard rate of first TreM formation (defined as the probability of formation of a first TreM forming on a tree that is known to have none, during an infinitesimal DBH increment) increased with DBH for some TreM groups like breeding‐woodpecker‐hole, rot‐hole or root‐concavity, indicating an acceleration in TreM formation during tree growth. However, it decreased with DBH for TreM groups like bark‐loss or dendrotelm, indicating slower formation on very large trees. Most TreM groups had reduced formation rates in managed forests (last logging less than 100 years ago) compared to unmanaged forests (no logging for at least 100 years), with the exception of dendrotelms. No general difference appeared between broadleaves and conifers, but early‐successional species tended to have different TreMs than mid‐ and late‐successional species. Abies, Alnus, Betula, Fagus, Prunus, Quercus, Sorbus, Tilia and Ulmus displayed high formation rates for six TreM groups or more. Variability among sites was considerable.Synthesis and applications. The rate of formation of tree‐related microhabitats (TreMs) varies greatly among TreM groups, tree species, locations, tree diameters at breast height and forest management. The high rate of formation of some TeM groups on small trees implies that tree retention for biodiversity should concern trees of all sizes and start as soon as thinning operations have occurred. Biodiversity conservation should value not only forest stands and trees that already have many TreMs but also those where the likelihood of future TreM formation is high due to species, maturity or local environmental conditions. The addition of quantitative models of TreM formation to forest stand dynamics simulators is necessary to better take into account biodiversity conservation in forest management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. 药用真菌香樟范氏孔菌的驯化栽培及生物学发育 特征.
- Author
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杨雄 and 赵长林
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL wastes ,FRUITING bodies (Fungi) ,CORNCOBS ,WASTE management ,WOOD waste - Abstract
Copyright of Mycosystema is the property of Mycosystema Editorial Board and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The phylogenetic analysis of Armenian collections of medicinal tinder polypore Fomes fomentarius (Agaricomycetes, Polyporaceae).
- Author
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Badalyan, Susanna M., Zhuykova, Elena V., and Mukhin, Victor A.
- Subjects
POLYPORACEAE ,DECIDUOUS plants ,TEMPERATE forests ,BEECH ,WALNUT - Abstract
The medicinal tinder polypore Fomes fomentarius is widely distributed in all floristic regions of Armenia on different woody substrates. The phylogenetic analysis of Armenian collections using ITS barcoding revealed that it is taxonomically complex species represented by sublineages A2 and B2 (in ratio 1:1) of European phylogenetic lineages A and B, which correspond to two cryptic sympatric species F. fomentarius sensu stricto and F. inzengae, respectively. These species are phylogenetically almost equidistant from Fomes fasciatus by the level of nucleotide divergence (6.75% and 7.17%, respectively). Nucleotide divergence between these two species is 1.85% which does not exceed the average level of intraspecific ITS variability in basidiomycetes fungi (3.33%). It is suggesting that F. fomentarius s.s. and F. inzengae are possibly not taxonomically separate species, but sympatric cryptic subspecies of F. fomentarius sensu lato. Both taxa significantly differ by their ecology and distribution: F. fomentarius s.s. is mainly found on Betula spp. trees and widespread in temperate forests, while F. inzengae has been recorded on Carpinus sp., Fagus sp., Populus sp. and other deciduous trees in subtropical latitudes. In Armenia, F. fomentarius s.s. was found on Fagus sp. and Quercus sp., while F. inzengae - on Carpinus sp., Juglans sp., Fagus sp., Populus sp., and Salix sp. trees. Although the species rank of Mediterranean subtropical species F. inzengae remains disputable it has been originally described for the mycobiota of Armenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Two new species of Ceriporia (Irpicaceae, Basidiomycota) from the Asia Pacific area.
- Author
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Chen, Jia-Jia, Wang, Ya-Rong, Wang, Chao-Ge, and Dai, Yu-Cheng
- Abstract
Two new species of Ceriporia, including C. eucalypti sp. nov. and C. sino-viridans sp. nov., are described based on the morphology and phylogeny of samples from the Asia Pacific region. C. eucalypti is characterized by resupinate and snow white basidiocarps when fresh, abundant crystals and oily substances present in the subiculum and trama, distinct allantoid basidiospores that measure 4–4.4 × 1.1–1.4 µm, and growth on wood of Eucalyptus in Australia. C. sino-viridans is characterized by white to flesh-pink pores when fresh, distinctly curved to lunate basidiospores that measure 3–3.5 × 1.7–2.2 µm. It occurs in tropical China. C. eucalypti, C. sino-viridans, C. aurantiocarnescens, and C. viridans are phylogenetically related, but they can be distinguished by the size of their basidiospores. A key to the accepted species of Ceriporia that are accepted in the Asia-West Pacific area is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Postia alni Niemelä & Vampola (Basidiomycota, Polyporales) – member of the problematic Postia caesia complex – has been found for the first time in Hungary
- Author
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Papp, Viktor and Pensoft Publishers
- Subjects
Hungary ,Oligoporus ,polypore ,Polypore ,polypore ,polypore ,Postia alni ,Postia caesia complex - Published
- 2014
38. Experimental evidence on biodiversity impacts of variable retention forestry, prescribed burning, and deadwood manipulation in Fennoscandia
- Author
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Matti Koivula and Ilkka Vanha-Majamaa
- Subjects
Beetle ,Forest management ,Invertebrate ,Polypore ,Resilience ,Resistance ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Intensive forest management has been applied in most Fennoscandian forests for a period of almost one felling rotation. This paradigm has produced even-aged and even-structured forests of different successional stages that cover about 90% of forest land. At the same time, wildfires have been nearly eliminated in most of the Fennoscandian nature. Consequently, hundreds of species are red-listed because of forest management. To support these species, forest management requires improvements. Variable retention forestry and habitat restoration have been suggested to mitigate negative effects of forest management on biodiversity, and these have been practiced to some extent during the past few decades. Here, we review experimental results on the effects of variable retention and two restoration measures (prescribed burning and artificial addition of coarse woody debris) on different species groups in Fennoscandia. Our key findings are as follows: (i) Many species respond positively to felling within a few years, apparently due to released and often ephemeral resources, such as fresh residue and stumps. Species associated with shady conditions are negatively impacted, but any retention supports many of these, and their species composition remains almost unaffected with 50–70% retention of the initial tree volume. (ii) These effects remain detectable for at least 10–30 years or, according to some studies, nearly 100 years, e.g., in polypore fungi. (iii) Initial effects of prescribed burning on most species groups (apart from pyrophiles) are negative, but within 10–15 years post-fire sites begin to support many rare and threatened deadwood-dependent species. Epiphytic lichens, however, remain negatively affected. (iv) Artificial addition of deadwood (mostly high stumps) supports a wide spectrum of deadwood-dependent species, but the species composition differs from that of naturally died trees. (v) Moisture and micro-habitat variation are crucial for forest species at harvested sites, at least in forests dominated by Norway spruce. We conclude that felling method as such is of little importance for threatened forest species, although retention mitigates many negative effects. These species require microclimatic continuity, and maintenance and active increase of legacies, such as deadwood of different qualities (species, downed/standing, snag/log/stump, decay stage), very old trees, and tree species mixtures.
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
39. Taxonomy and Phylogeny of the Fomitopsis pinicola Complex With Descriptions of Six New Species From East Asia
- Author
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Shun Liu, Mei-Ling Han, Tai-Min Xu, Yan Wang, Dong-Mei Wu, and Bao-Kai Cui
- Subjects
brown-rot fungi ,host specialization ,multi-gene phylogeny ,polypore ,species complex ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Fomitopsis pinicola is a common brown-rot fungal species found in northern hemisphere. It grows on many different gymnosperm and angiosperm trees. Recent studies show that it is a species complex; three species from North America and one species from Europe have been recognized in this complex. In the current study, six new species in the Fomitopsis pinicola complex were discovered from East Asia, based on morphological characters and phylogenetic analyses inferred from the sequence data of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, the second subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB2), and the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF). Detailed descriptions of the six new species are provided. Our results also indicates that species of the F. pinicola complex from East Asia usually have limited distribution areas and host specialization.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Taxonomy and Phylogeny of the Fomitopsis pinicola Complex With Descriptions of Six New Species From East Asia.
- Author
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Liu, Shun, Han, Mei-Ling, Xu, Tai-Min, Wang, Yan, Wu, Dong-Mei, and Cui, Bao-Kai
- Subjects
RNA polymerases ,RNA polymerase II ,SPECIES ,PHYLOGENY - Abstract
Fomitopsis pinicola is a common brown-rot fungal species found in northern hemisphere. It grows on many different gymnosperm and angiosperm trees. Recent studies show that it is a species complex; three species from North America and one species from Europe have been recognized in this complex. In the current study, six new species in the Fomitopsis pinicola complex were discovered from East Asia, based on morphological characters and phylogenetic analyses inferred from the sequence data of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions, the second subunit of RNA polymerase II (RPB2), and the translation elongation factor 1-α gene (TEF). Detailed descriptions of the six new species are provided. Our results also indicates that species of the F. pinicola complex from East Asia usually have limited distribution areas and host specialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Three new species of Cyanosporus (Polyporales, Basidiomycota) from China.
- Author
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Wang CG, Liu S, Ghobad-Nejhad M, Liu HG, Dai YC, and Yuan Y
- Abstract
Cyanosporus is a cosmopolitan genus characterized by effused-reflexed to pileate basidiomata with a bluish tint and allantoid to cylindrical basidiospores which are negative to weakly positive in Melzer's reagent and Cotton Blue, causing a brown rot. Three new species of Cyanosporus , namely, C.linzhiensis , C.miscanthi and C.tabuliformis are described and illustrated. Phylogenies on Cyanosporus are reconstructed with seven loci DNA sequences including ITS, nLSU, nSSU, mtSSU, RPB1, RPB2 and TEF1 based on phylogenetic analyses combined with morphological examination. The description for the new species is given. The main morphological characteristics of all 38 accepted species in Cyanosporus are summarized., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Chao-Ge Wang, Shun Liu, Masoomeh Ghobad-Nejhad, Hong-Gao Liu, Yu-Cheng Dai, Yuan Yuan.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Two new species of Physisporinus (Polyporales, Basidiomycota) from Yunnan, Southwest China.
- Author
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Chen, Jia-Jia and Dai, Yu-Cheng
- Abstract
Based on morphological characteristics and molecular phylogenetic analysis using nuc rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 and 28S rDNA sequences, two new species of Physisporinus, Physisporinus castanopsidis sp. nov. and Physisporinus roseus sp. nov. are described from Yunnan Province, Southwest China. Physisporinus castanopsidis is characterised by resupinate, snow white and waxy basidiocarps which become pale brown when bruised, abundant hymenial cystidia and cystidia-like hyphae at dissepiment edge, generative hyphae with swollen tips, distinctly ovoid basidiospores measuring 4.8–5.6 × 3.6–4.2 μm and growing on rotten wood or roots of Castanopsis. Physisporinus roseus is characterised by perennial, resupinate and thick basidiomata with rose fresh pores which becoming vinaceous grey up on drying, a distinct context layer present among tube layers, abundant clavate, smooth cystidia and subglobose basidiospores measuring 3.5–4.1 × 3.1–3.8 μm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Three new species of Junghuhnia (Polyporales, Basidiomycota) from China.
- Author
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Ping Du, Fang Wu, and Xue-Mei Tian
- Subjects
- *
BASIDIOMYCOTA , *BASIDIOSPORES , *ANGIOSPERMS , *PINK salmon , *SPECIES - Abstract
In this study, taxonomic and phylogenetic analyses of Junghuhnia were performed. Three new species were characterised according to morphological characteristics and molecular phylogenetic analysis using ITS and nLSU sequences. They are J. austrosinensis sp. nov., J. nandinae sp. nov. and J. subcollabens sp. nov. Junghuhnia austrosinensis is characterised by resupinate, thin basidiomata with white to buff-yellow hymenophore, small pores (9-11 per mm), clamped generative hyphae possessing hymenial cystidia, ellipsoid basidiospores (2.5-3 × 1.7-2 μm) and growth on fallen bamboo or angiosperm branch. Junghuhnia nandinae is characterised by resupinate basidiomata with pink to salmon pores and a distinct white margin, clamp generative hyphae, interwoven tramal hyphae, ellipsoid basidiospores measuring 2.6-3.2 × 1.8-2 μm and growth on Nandina domestica. Junghuhnia subcollabens is characterised by resupinate basidiomata with pale salmon to brownish vinaceous hymenophore, small pores (10-12 per mm), generative hyphae with simple septa and clamp connections, interwoven tramal hyphae, lunate basidiospores measuring 2.9-3.4 × 1.6-1.8 μm and thriving on rotten wood of angiosperms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Four new species of Phylloporia (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota) from southeastern Taiwan.
- Author
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Wu, Sheng-Hua, Chang, Chiung-Chih, Wei, Chia-Ling, Lin, Yu-Ting, and Chen, Siou-Zhen
- Abstract
Four new species of Phylloporia (Hymenochaetales) are presented based on collections made from subtropical-tropical southeastern Taiwan. They are P. alyxiae, P. mori, P. murrayae, and P. rubiacearum. These four species respectively grow on plant genera Alyxia, Morus, Murraya, and family Rubiaceae. Their status of new species in Phylloporia is supported by a combined survey based on morphological features, host species, geographic distribution, and phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences inferred from a dataset of nuc 28S rDNA. ITS sequence analysis is effective in distinguishing P. alyxiae and P. murrayae, respectively, from the most closely related species. Descriptions, basidiocarp photos, and microscopic illustrations are provided for these new species. So far, 61 species are known in the genus Phylloporia worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Molecular phylogeny and morphology reveal two new species of Coltricia (Hymenochaetaceae Basidiomycota) from China.
- Author
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Bian, Lu-Sen and Dai, Yu-Cheng
- Abstract
Two new species of Coltricia, C. subcinnamomea and C. subverrucata, are described from China based on both morphological and molecular data. Phylogenetic analyses based on nuc rDNA ITS1-5.8S-ITS2, partial 28S rDNA and partial 18S rDNA, mt partial 12S rDNA, partial sequences of genes for RNA polymerase II subunits 1 and 2, and partial sequences of genes for EF-1α confirmed the generic placement of the two new species. Coltricia subcinnamomea is characterized by stipitate, mesopodal basidiocarps, a slightly shiny pileal surface, 2–3 pores per mm, and broadly ellipsoid to subglobose basidiospores, 8.0–9.5 × 6.2–6.8 μm. Coltricia subverrucata is characterized by stipitate, mesopodal basidiocarps, a faintly concentrically zonate pileal surface with radiating lines, 0.5–2 pores per mm, strongly verrucose hyphae and broadly ellipsoid basidiospores, 7.8–9.0 × 6.0–7.0 μm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Two new species of Perenniporia (Polyporales, Basidiomycota).
- Author
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Chao-Ge Wang, Shi-Liang Liu, and Fang Wu
- Subjects
- *
BASIDIOMYCOTA , *BASIDIOSPORES , *WOOD-decaying fungi , *ELLIPSOIDS - Abstract
Two new species of Perenniporia, P. pseudotephropora sp. nov. and P. subcorticola sp. nov., are introduced respectively from Brazil and China based on morphological characteristics and molecular data. Perenniporia pseudotephropora is characterised by perennial, pileate basidiocarps with distinctly stratified tubes, grey pores, tissues becoming dark in KOH, a dimitic hyphal system with slightly dextrinoid arboriform skeletal hyphae and broadly ellipsoid to subglobose, truncate, weakly dextrinoid, cyanophilous basidiospores, measuring 4.9-5.2 × 4-4.8 µm. Perenniporia subcorticola is characterised by resupinate basidiocarps, yellow pores with thick dissepiments, tissues becoming dark in KOH, flexuous skeletal hyphae, ellipsoid, truncate and slightly dextrinoid basidiospores, measuring 4.2-5 × 3.5-4.2 µm. The morphologicallysimilar species and phylogenetically closely-related species to the two new species are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Contribution to the Macromycetes of West Bengal, India: 13–17
- Author
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Tarafder, Entaj, Dutta, Arun Kumar, Pradhan, Prakash, Mondal, Bidisha, Chakraborty, Nilanjan, Paloi, Soumitra, Roy, Anirban, and Acharya, Krishnendu
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Coarse woody debris provides cobenefits between carbon stock and diversity of polypore fungi in Malaysian forest stands
- Author
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Yamashita Satoshi, Salleh Habibah, Wasli Mohd Effendi, Alias Mohamad Azani, Itioka Takao, Tanaka Kenzo, and Ichie Tomoaki
- Subjects
secondary forest ,CWD ,polypore ,primary forest ,forest management - Published
- 2022
49. Supplementary information for: 'Identifying the Biological Potential of Western Balkan Polypore Mushroom Species to Mitigate the Negative Effects of Global Mushroom Cultivation'
- Author
-
Kozarski, Maja, Klaus, Anita, Špirović Trifunović, Bojana, Miletić, Srđan, Lazić, Vesna, Žižak, Željko, Vunduk, Jovana, Kozarski, Maja, Klaus, Anita, Špirović Trifunović, Bojana, Miletić, Srđan, Lazić, Vesna, Žižak, Željko, and Vunduk, Jovana
- Abstract
Growing mushrooms is meeting challenges while aiming for sustainability and circularity. Wherever the producer is located, commercial strains are the same originating from several producers. Following the harvest, enormous quantities of spent mushroom substrate containing spores are disposed presenting a type of foreign material pressure on the ecosystem in the form of the loss of genetic diversity in wild mushroom populations. This challenge can be mitigated by bioprospecting local strains and using them to generate commercial inoculum. Accordingly, the mycoceutical potential of five polypore mushroom species from Serbia was evaluated: secondary metabolite composition, oxidative damage prevention, anti-tyrosinase, and antiangiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) properties. The phenolic pattern was comparable in all samples, but the amounts of specific chemicals varied. Hydroxybenzoic acids were the primary components. All samples had varying quantities of ascorbic acid, carotene, and lycopene, and showed a pronounced inhibition of lipid peroxidation (LPx) and ability to scavenge HO•. Extracts were more potent tyrosinase inhibitors but unsuccessful when faced with ACE. Fomitopsis pinicola had the strongest anti-tumor efficacy while Ganoderma lucidum demonstrated strong selectivity in anti-tumor effect in comparison to healthy cells. The evaluated species provided a solid foundation for commercial development while keeping the local ecology in mind.
- Published
- 2023
50. Identifying the Biological Potential of Western Balkan Polypore Mushroom Species to Mitigate the Negative Effects of Global Mushroom Cultivation
- Author
-
Kozarski, Maja, Klaus, Anita, Špirović Trifunović, Bojana, Miletić, Srđan, Lazić, Vesna, Žižak, Željko, Vunduk, Jovana, Kozarski, Maja, Klaus, Anita, Špirović Trifunović, Bojana, Miletić, Srđan, Lazić, Vesna, Žižak, Željko, and Vunduk, Jovana
- Abstract
Growing mushrooms is meeting challenges while aiming for sustainability and circularity. Wherever the producer is located, commercial strains are the same originating from several producers. Following the harvest, enormous quantities of spent mushroom substrate containing spores are disposed presenting a type of foreign material pressure on the ecosystem in the form of the loss of genetic diversity in wild mushroom populations. This challenge can be mitigated by bioprospecting local strains and using them to generate commercial inoculum. Accordingly, the mycoceutical potential of five polypore mushroom species from Serbia was evaluated: secondary metabolite composition, oxidative damage prevention, anti-tyrosinase, and antiangiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) properties. The phenolic pattern was comparable in all samples, but the amounts of specific chemicals varied. Hydroxybenzoic acids were the primary components. All samples had varying quantities of ascorbic acid, carotene, and lycopene, and showed a pronounced inhibition of lipid peroxidation (LPx) and ability to scavenge HO•. Extracts were more potent tyrosinase inhibitors but unsuccessful when faced with ACE. Fomitopsis pinicola had the strongest anti-tumor efficacy while Ganoderma lucidum demonstrated strong selectivity in anti-tumor effect in comparison to healthy cells. The evaluated species provided a solid foundation for commercial development while keeping the local ecology in mind.
- Published
- 2023
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