Phylloporia (genus of mushrooms)
Phylloporia | ||||||||||||
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Shrub Porling ( Phylloporia ribis ) |
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Systematics | ||||||||||||
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Scientific name | ||||||||||||
Phylloporia | ||||||||||||
Murrill |
Phylloporia is a genus of fungus that has been separated from the fire sponges in the narrower sense ( Phellinus s. Str. ).
The type species is Phylloporia parasitica .
features
The perennial fruiting bodies are spread out flat on the substrate until pileat. The cinnamon brown to dark brown hat has a soft and thick tomentum over a clearly thin and dark zone. The upper side usually shows a narrow to wide, concentric furrowed zoning. The surface of the entire, angular to round pores and the tubes are colored brown. The light to dark brown and thin trama is delimited by the thick felt covering on the hat with a distinct dark zone. The fruit bodies blacken with potassium hydroxide . The monomitic hyphae system consists of colorless to light rust-brown and simple septate, generative hyphae . Setae are absent. The elliptical, slightly thick-walled spores, which are light yellowish in color with age , do not grow to a size of 5 µm. The species of the genus colonize hardwood, often living bushes or strikingly thin, dead branches on living trees or on living leaves. Phylloporia is a predominantly tropical genus.
Art
The following type is specified for Europe:
German name | Scientific name | Author quote |
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Gooseberry Fire Sponge | Phylloporia ribis | (Schumacher 1803: Fries 1821) Ryvarden 1978 |
See also
swell
Individual evidence
- ↑ Leif Ryvarden, Inger Johansen: A preliminary polypore flora of East Africa . Fungiflora, Oslo (Norway) 1980, p. 230 (Open Library ID OL19397841M).
- ↑ Eric Strittmatter: The genus Phylloporia . In: fungiworld.com. Mushroom Taxa Database. Retrieved May 2, 2011 .