Inonotus andersonii, also known as oak canker-rot and heart rot, is a species of resupinate polypore fungus that forms fruiting bodies underneath tree bark.[1] I. andersonii induces canker rot in oak, hickory, cottonwood, and willow trees.[2][3]

Inonotus andersonii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Hymenochaetales
Family: Hymenochaetaceae
Genus: Inonotus
Species:
I. andersonii
Binomial name
Inonotus andersonii
(Ellis & Everh.) Černý
Synonyms

Poria andersonii

Wood that has been infected by this species appears bleached of color and crumbles easily. Where sapwood decay reaches the cambium, the cambium may be killed, giving rise to an externally visible canker. The cankers caused by I. andersonii are commonly elongate and may become callused at the edges. The bark near expanding or developing cankers may also ooze varying amounts of dark sap. Affected branches or trees may show general symptoms of decline including poor growth, thinning, dieback, epicormic shoots (short twiggy branches arising from dormant buds on large-diameter stems) and branch or trunk failures. Generally, trees with canker rots decline slowly, often appearing to die from the top down as they slowly fall apart over a period of many years. The fruiting bodies (basidiocarps) of this fungus may appear on living trees or on recently failed stems.[3]

I. andersonii is "a true pathogen of living trees with a pronounced specificity for oak, [that] exhibits annual, widely effused fruitbodies, monomitic hyphal system, and broadly ellipsoid, yellowish, thick-walled basidiospores."[4] Inonotus andersonii and similar canker rots are serious pathogens of California oaks and are associated with oak decline, failure, and mortality in many California oak woodlands.[3]

White oak log in Clarke County, Georgia, fully inoculated by Inonotus andersonii, infection attributes labeled by ecologist Bill Sheehan (iNaturalist)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Decay fungi of oaks and associated hardwoods for western arborists - Jessie A. Glaeser and Kevin T. Smith - Western Arborist" (PDF). www.nrs.fs.usda.gov. Winter 2010. p. 37. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  2. ^ "Inonotus andersonii". iNaturalist. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  3. ^ a b c Swiecki, Tedmund J.; Bernhardt, Elizabeth A. (2006). A Field Guide to Insects and Diseases of California Oaks. Pacific Southwest Research Station (Report). Gen. Tech Rep. PSW-GTR-197. Albany, California: U.S. Forest Service Treesearch Department. pp. 7, 96–99. doi:10.2737/PSW-GTR-197.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. ^ Misra, J. K.; Tewari, J. P.; Deshmukh, S. K. (2012-01-10). Systematics and Evolution of Fungi. CRC Press. p. 264. ISBN 978-1-57808-723-5.