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Loweomyces

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Loweomyces
Loweomyces fractipes
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Loweomyces

(Kotl. & Pouzar) Jülich (1982)
Type species
Loweomyces fractipes
(Berk. & M.A.Curtis) Jülich (1982)
Species

L. fractipes
L. sibiricus
L. spissus
L. subgiganteus
L. tomentosus
L. wynneae

Synonyms[1]
  • Spongipellis subgen. Loweomyces Kotlába & Pouzar (1976)

Loweomyces is a genus of six species of poroid fungi in the family Steccherinaceae (formerly placed in the Meruliaceae).[2]

Taxonomy

It was originally circumscribed as a subgenus of Spongipellis by the Czech mycologists František Kotlaba and Zdeněk Pouzar in 1976.[3] Swiss mycologist Walter Jülich promoted it to a genus segregate from Spongipellis in 1982, with two species: L. fractipes (the type), and L. wynneae. Jülich thought the genus should be distinct from Spongipellis based on the larger basidia, the absence of skeletal hyphae, and smaller tubes.[4] L. fractipes and L. wynneae have had their generic positions confirmed with molecular phylogenetics, and both group in the "residual polyploid clade", one of four main lineages of the Polyporales.[2][5] The genus is named in honour of American mycologist and polypore specialist Josiah Lincoln Lowe.[6]

Description

Loweomyces is distinguished by the ease of spore germination in growth media, larger basidia, the absence of skeletal hyphae, and smaller tubes, plates or spines, compared with European Spongipellis species.[4] Fruit bodies are either crust-like or have a cap and stipe. The hyphal system is either monomitic (possessing only generative hyphae) or dimitic (having both generative and pseudo-skeletal hyphae).[7]

Species

The genus contained four species as of January 2015.[8] Two new species from Brazil were described in 2016.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Loweomyces (Kotl. & Pouzar) Jülich". Species Fungorum. CAB International. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
  2. ^ a b Miettinen, Otto; Larsson, Ellen; Sjökvist, Elisabet; Larsson, Karl-Henrik (2012). "Comprehensive taxon sampling reveals unaccounted diversity and morphological plasticity in a group of dimitic polypores (Polyporales, Basidiomycota)" (PDF). Cladistics. 28: 251–270. doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.2011.00380.x.
  3. ^ Kotlába, F.; Pouzar, Z. (1976). "On the taxonomic position of Polyporus fractipes". Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden. 28: 119–28.
  4. ^ a b Jülich, W. (1982). "Notes on some Basidiomycetes (Aphyllophorales and Heterobasidiomycetes)". Persoonia. 11 (4): 421–428.
  5. ^ Binder, Manfred; Justo, Alfredo; Riley, Robert; Salamov, Asaf; Lopez-Giraldez, Francesc; Sjökvist, Elisabet; Copeland, Alex; Foster, Brian; Sun, Hui; Larsson, Ellen; Larsson, Karl-Henrik; Townsend, Jeffrey; Grigoriev, Igor V.; Hibbett, David S. (2013). "Phylogenetic and phylogenomic overview of the Polyporales". Mycologia. 105 (6): 1350–1373. doi:10.3852/13-003. PMID 23935031.
  6. ^ Ginns, J.; Worrall, J. (2003). "Josiah Lincoln Lowe, 1905–1997". Mycologia. 95 (2): 374–378. doi:10.1080/15572536.2004.11833124. JSTOR 3762050. Open access icon
  7. ^ a b Westphalen, Mauro C.; Tomšovský, Michal; Rajchenberg, Mario; Gugliotta, Adriana M. (2016). "Morphological and phylogenetic studies of two new neotropical species of Loweomyces (Polyporales, Basidiomycota)". Mycological Progress. 16 (9): 967–975. doi:10.1007/s11557-016-1223-7.
  8. ^ Kirk, P.M. "Species Fungorum (version 22nd December 2014). In: Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life". Retrieved 2015-01-28.
  9. ^ a b Zmitrovich, Ivan V.; Malysheva, Vera F.; Spirin, Wjacheslav A. (2006). "A new morphological arrangement of the Polyporales. I. Phanerochaetineae" (PDF). Mycena. 6: 4–56.