Phlebopus marginatus

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iPhlebopus marginatus
P. marginatus a moderate sized specimen, East Gippsland, January 1993
P. marginatus
a moderate sized specimen, East Gippsland,
January 1993
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Homobasidiomycetes
Order: Boletales
Family: Boletinellaceae
Genus: Phlebopus
Species: P. marginatus
Binomial name
Phlebopus marginatus
(J.Drumm. ex Berk.) Watling & N.M.Greg
Phlebopus marginatus
mycological characteristics:
 
pores on hymenium
 

cap is convex

 

hymenium is seceding

 

stipe is bare

 

spore print is brown

 

ecology is mycorrhizal

 

edibility: unknown


Phlebopus marginatus, known as the Salmon gum mushroom in Western Australia, is a member of the Boletales or pored fungi and possibly Australia's largest terrestrial mushroom with the weight of one specimen from Victoria recorded at 29 kg (64 pounds). It is an imposing sight in forests of southeastern and southwestern Australia. Initally described as Boletus marginatus in 1845[1], and also previously known by equally impressive scientific names such as Phaeogyroporus portentosus and Boletus portentosus it is in fact not as closely related to typical boletes as previously thought.[2]

The generic name is derived from the Greek Φλεβο- "vein" and πους "foot".[3]

Contents

[edit] Description

P. marginatus cap from above, East Gippsland, Victoria - January 1992
Enlarge
P. marginatus cap from above,
East Gippsland, Victoria - January 1992

A fungus which may reach huge proportions, with a chestnut cap up to 1 metre (40 in) in diameter and yellowish pores and thick ringless stalk. Spores are yellow-brown. Mature specimens are very attractive to insects and often infested with them.

[edit] Distribution and habitat

Phlebopus marginatus is an example of a Gondwanan fungus, being found in Indonesia, Malaysia and Sri Lanka as well as Australia and New Zealand, with related species found in South America. Within Australia it occurs in eucalypt forests and may be found any time after rain.

[edit] Edibility

As with many Australian mushrooms, Phlebopus marginatus is generally recorded as of unknown edibility though one book describes it as reputedly edible and mild tasting[4].

[edit] References

  1. ^ >Berkeley MJ (1845). "Decades of fungi. Dec. III-VII. Australian fungi". London J. Bot. 4: 42-73.
  2. ^ Watling R & Gregory NM (1988). "Observations on the boletes of the Cooloola sandmass, Queensland and notes on their distribution in Australia. Part 2 B: smooth spored taxa of the family Gyrodontaceae and the genus Pulveroboletus". Proc. Roy. Soc. Queensland 99: 65-76.
  3. ^ Liddell & Scott (1980). Greek-English Lexicon, Abridged Edition. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. ISBN 0-19-910207-4.
  4. ^ Griffiths K (1985). A field guide to the larger fungi of the Darling Scarp & South West of Western Australia. Griffiths K. ISBN 0-9589705-0-5.
  • Fuhrer B. (2005) A Field Guide to Australian Fungi. Bloomings Books. ISBN 876473-51-7

[edit] External links