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Nigroporus vinosus

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Nigroporus vinosus
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Division:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
N. vinosus
Binomial name
Nigroporus vinosus
(Berk.) Murrill (1905)
Synonyms[1]
  • Polyporus vinosus Berk. (1852)
  • Polystictus vinosus (Berk.) Sacc. (1888)
  • Microporus vinosus (Berk.) Kuntze (1898)
  • Coriolus vinosus (Berk.) Pat. (1900)
  • Fomitopsis vinosa (Berk.) Imazeki (1952)

Nigroporus vinosus is a species of poroid fungus in the family Steccherinaceae, and the type species of the genus Nigroporus. Its fruit bodies have brownish caps with tinges of purple or red. The cap underside has a pore surface the same colour as the cap, and minute pores. Nigroporus vinosus has a pantropical distribution. It has been recorded from Africa, North America, Central America, South America, Asia, and Oceania. It is a wood-decay fungus that causes a white rot.

Taxonomy

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The fungus was first described scientifically by Miles Joseph Berkeley as Polyporus vinosus in 1852. The type was collected in Saint-Domingue by Augustus Sallé. Berkeley called the fungus "a very remarkable species, to which I can point out nothing closely allied."[2] William Alphonso Murrill made it the type species of his newly created genus Nigroporus in 1905. He noted that the fungus was "easily recognized by its wine-coloured context."[3]

In the interim between Berkeley and Murrill's nomenclatural changes, the species was shuffled between several genera: Polystictus (Saccardo, 1888);[4] Microporus (Kuntze, 1898);[5] and Coriolus (Patouillard, 1900).[6] In 1952, Rokuya Imazeki proposed a transfer to Fomitopsis.[7]

Description

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The fruit bodies of Nigroporus vinosus are annual to perennial. Their caps are leathery to smooth, and sometimes has concentric zones. The colour is reddish-brown to purplish-brown to dark violet. Pores on the cap underside any minute, numbering seven or eight per millimetre; the tubes are up to 3 mm (0.12 in) long. The pore surface has the same colours as the cap. The tough context, coloured dark brown to reddish brown, is pliable when fresh but become brittle when dry. The spore print is white.[8] The odour and taste of the context are indistinct.[9]

The hyphal system of Nigroporus vinosus is variable. According to E.J.H. Corner, "Some collections appear to be almost trimitic; others are dimitic and, yet, others are almost monomitic with elongate intercalary skeletal cells."[10] There are no cystidia in the hymenium. The spores are small, measuring 3–4.5 by 1–1.5 μm. They are smooth and thin-walled, hyaline (translucent), with an allantoid (long with rounded ends) to broadly ellipsoid shape. They are unreactive with Melzer's reagent. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are thin walled and club shaped, measuring 6–10 by 3–4 μm.[8][11]

Similar species

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Nigrofomes melanoporus is somewhat similar in appearance to Nigroporus vinosus. Known from tropical regions and from Florida, this fungus has a larger cap that is up to 20 cm (8 in) wide, a hard dark brown to purplish black cap surface, a dark brown to blackish pore surface with pores arranged in a honeycomb, and ellipsoid spores measuring 4–5 by 3–3.5 μm.[9]

Habitat and distribution

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Nigroporus vinosus is a white rot fungus that typically grows on the decaying wood of hardwood trees, although it has also been recorded growing on pine.[8] Fruit bodies occur singly, in groups, or in overlapping clusters.[9]

The fungus has been recorded from Central America,[12] South America,[13] Cuba,[3] Papua New Guinea, China,[14] India,[15] the Philippines,[16] Peninsular Malaysia,[17] and Micronesia.[18] In Africa, it is widespread but not common.[11] It is the only species of Nigroporus found in North America.[19]

References

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  1. ^ "GSD Species Synonymy: Nigroporus vinosus (Berk.) Murrill". Species Fungorum. Retrieved 2016-11-09.
  2. ^ Berkeley, M.J. (1852). "Enumeration of some fungi from St. Domingo". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 9: 192–200.
  3. ^ a b Murrill, William A. (1905). "The Polyporaceae of North America: XI. A synopsis of the brown pileate species". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 32 (7): 353–371. doi:10.2307/2478499. JSTOR 2478499.
  4. ^ Saccardo, P.A. (1888). Sylloge Hymenomycetum, Vol. II. Polyporeae, Hydneae, Thelephoreae, Clavarieae, Tremellineae. Sylloge Fungorum (in Latin). Vol. 6. p. 273.
  5. ^ Kuntze, O. (1898). "Revisio generum plantarum" (in Latin). 3. A. Felix [etc.]: 497. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Patouillard, N. (1900). Essai taxonomique sur les familles et les genres des Hyménomycètes (in French). Lons-Le-Saunier: Lucien Declume. p. 94.
  7. ^ Imazeki, R. (1952). "A contribution to the fungous flora of Dutch New Guinea". Bulletin of the Government Forest Experimental Station Meguro. 57: 87–128 (see p. 111).
  8. ^ a b c Bessette, A.; Miller, O.K. Jr; Bessette, A.R.; Miller, H.R. (1995). Mushrooms of North America in Color: A Field Guide Companion to Seldom-Illustrated Fungi. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. pp. 120–121. ISBN 978-0-8156-2666-4.
  9. ^ a b c Bessette, A.E.; Roody, W.C.; Bessette, A.R. (2007). Mushrooms of the Southeastern United States. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0815631125.
  10. ^ Corner, E.J.H. (1987). Ad Polyporaceas IV. Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia. Vol. 86. J. Cramer. p. 127. ISBN 978-3-443-51008-4.
  11. ^ a b Ryvarden, Leif; Johansen, I. (1980). A Preliminary Polypore Flora of East Africa. Synopsis Fungorum. Oslo, Norway: Fungiflora. pp. 446–448.
  12. ^ Velázquez, Julieta Carranza; Ruiz-Boyer, Armando (2005). "Checklist of polypores of Costa Rica" (PDF). Revista Mexicana de Micología. 20: 45–52.
  13. ^ Robledo, Gerardo L.; Rajchenberg, Mario (2007). "South American polypores: First annotated checklist from Argentinean Yungas". Mycotaxon. 100: 5–7.
  14. ^ Wang, Bing; Cui, Bao-Kai; Li, Hai-Jiao; Ping Du; Jia, Bi-Si (2011). "Wood-rotting fungi in eastern China. 5. Polypore diversity in Jiangxi Province". Annales Botanici Fennici. 48 (3): 237–246. doi:10.5735/085.048.0304. S2CID 84891011.
  15. ^ Bakshi, B.K.; Sehgal, H.S.; Singh, B. (1969). "Cultural diagnosis of Indian Polyporaceae. I. Genus Polyporus". Indian Forest Records. 2 (9): 205–244.
  16. ^ Murrill, William A. (1907). "Some Philippine Polyporaceae". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 34 (9): 465–481. doi:10.2307/2479067. JSTOR 2479067.
  17. ^ Ujang, Salmiah; Jones, E.B.G. (2001). "Occurrence of wood inhabiting fungi in forests of Peninsular Malaysia". Journal of Tropical Forest Science. 13 (2): 237–245. JSTOR 43582295.
  18. ^ Gilbert, Gregory S.; Gorospe, Jennifer; Ryvarden, Leif (2008). "Host and habitat preferences of polypore fungi in Micronesian tropical flooded forests". Mycological Research. 112 (6): 674–680. doi:10.1016/j.mycres.2007.11.009. PMID 18495449. S2CID 30011589.
  19. ^ Zhou, Li-Wei; Nakasone, Karen K.; Burdsall Jr., Harold H.; Ginns, James; Vlasák, Josef; Miettinen, Otto; Spirin, Viacheslav; Niemelä, Tuomo; Yuan, Hai-Sheng; He, Shuang-Hui; Cui, Bao-Kai; Xing, Jia-Hui; Dai, Yu-Cheng (2016). "Polypore diversity in North America with an annotated checklist". Mycological Progress. 15 (7): 771–790. doi:10.1007/s11557-016-1207-7. S2CID 24481681.