Inocutis is a genus of nine species of polypore fungi in the family Hymenochaetaceae.
Inocutis | |
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Inocutis rheades | |
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Genus: | Inocutis Fiasson & Niemelä (1984)
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Type species | |
Inocutis rheades (Pers.) Fiasson & Niemelä (1984)
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Taxonomy
editThe genus was circumscribed by Jean-Louis Fiasson and Tuomo Niemeläin 1984 as a segregate genus from Inonotus. They originally included three European species formerly placed in Inonotus section Phymatopilus,[1] a grouping of species conceived by Marinus Anton Donk in 1974.[2] Molecular data later supported the genus concept.[3][4][5] Inocutis is phylogenetically close to Fomitiporella.[4]
Description
editInocutis species produce annual fruit bodies. They are characterized by the absence of setae, the presence of a rudimentary granular core, and the presence of sclerified hyphae in the granular core. They have yellowish to brownish spores that are ellipsoid in shape, and non-dextrinoid. The hyphal system is monomitic, consisting of only generative hyphae. They all grow on deciduous substrates.[4]
Species
edit- Inocutis dryophila (Berk.) Fiasson & Niemelä 1984[1]
- Inocutis jamaicensis (Murrill) A.M.Gottlieb, J.E.Wright & Moncalvo 2002 – North America; South America[5]
- Inocutis levis (P.Karst.) Y.C.Dai 2000 – China[6]
- Inocutis ludoviciana (Pat.) T.Wagner & M.Fisch. 2002[4]
- Inocutis porrecta (Murrill) Baltazar 2010[7]
- Inocutis rheades (Pers.) Fiasson & Niemelä 1984 – Europe;[1] Middle East[8]
- Inocutis subdryophila Y.C.Dai & H.S.Yuan 2005 – China[9]
- Inocutis tamaricis (Pat.) Fiasson & Niemelä 1984[1] – Africa; Asia; Europe; Middle East[10]
- Inocutis texana (Murrill) S.Martínez 2006 – North America; South America[11]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Fiasson JL, Niemelä T (1984). "The Hymenochaetales: a revision of the European poroid taxa". Karstenia. 24 (1): 14–28. doi:10.29203/ka.1984.224.
- ^ Donk MA. (1974). Checklist of European Polypores. Verhandelingen der Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, Afd. Natuurkunde. Tweede Reeks. Vol. 62. Amsterdam; London: North Holland Publishing Company.
- ^ Wagner T, Fischer M (2001). "Natural groups and a revised system for the European poroid Hymenochaetales (Basidiomycota) supported by nLSU rDNA sequence data". Mycological Research. 105 (7): 773–782. doi:10.1017/s0953756201004257.
- ^ a b c d Wagner T, Fischer M (2002). "Proceedings towards a natural classification of the worldwide taxa Phellinus s.l. and Inonotus s.l., and phylogenetic relationships of allied genera". Mycologia. 94 (6): 998–1016. doi:10.2307/3761866. JSTOR 3761866. PMID 21156572.
- ^ a b Gottlieb AM, Wright JE, Moncalvo JM (2002). "Inonotus s. l. in Argentina – morphology, cultural characters and molecular analyses". Mycological Progress. 1 (3): 299–313. Bibcode:2002MycPr...1..299G. doi:10.1007/s11557-006-0028-5.
- ^ Dai YC. (2000). "A checklist of polypores from Northeast China". Karstenia. 40 (1–2): 23–39. doi:10.29203/ka.2000.347.
- ^ Baltazar JM, Trierveiler-Pereira L, Loguercio-Leite C, Ryvarden L (2010). "Inonotus s.l. (Hymenochaetales) in the Brazilian herbaria FLOR and SP". Sydowia. 62 (1): 1–9.
- ^ Ghobad-Nejhad M, Kotiranta H (2008). "The genus Inonotus sensu lato in Iran, with keys to Inocutis and Mensularia worldwide" (PDF). Annales Botanici Fennici. 45 (6): 465–476. doi:10.5735/085.045.0605.
- ^ Dai YC, Yuan HS (2005). "Inocutis subdryophila (Basidiomycota), a new polypore from China". Mycotaxon. 93: 167–171.
- ^ Piątek M. (2001). "Inonotus tamaricis (Fungi, Hymenochaetales) on Melos in Greece". Polish Botanical Journal. 46 (2): 275–277.
- ^ Martinez S. (2006). "The genera Inocutis and Inonotus (Hymenochaetales) in Uruguay". Mycotaxon. 96: 1–8.