Hohenbuehelia

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Hohenbuehelia
Hohenbuehelia petaloides
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Subdivision: Agaricomycotina
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Pleurotaceae
Genus: Hohenbuehelia
Schulzer (1866)
Type species
Hohenbuehelia petaloides
(Bull.) Schulzer

Hohenbuehelia is a pleurotoid genus of agaric fungi characterized by gelatinous-sheathed bowling-pin-shaped cystidia, on conidia, basidiospore germ tubes, and mycelium that adhere to and capture nematodes. The fruitbodies bear thick-walled cystidia (metuloids) in the hymenium along the gill sides and that differentiate the genus from Pleurotus in the Pleurotaceae family. The genus has a widespread distribution and contains about 50 species.[1][2]

Etymology

Named after - Ludwig Samuel Joseph David Alexander Freiherr von Hohenbühel Heufler zu Rasen und Perdonegg (1817-1885) - an Austrian baron and cryptogamist.

Species

Hohenbuehelia mastrucata
  • H. abietina
  • H. aciculospora
  • H. amazonica
  • H. angustata
  • H. approximans
  • H. atrocoerulea
  • H. aurantiocystis
  • H. auriscalpium
  • H. austrocedri
  • H. barbatula
  • H. brunnea
  • H. campinaranae
  • H. culmicola
  • H. cyphelliformis
  • H. delasotae
  • H. elegans
  • H. espeletiae
  • H. fluxilis
  • H. grisea
  • H. heterosporica
  • H. horakii
  • H. hydrogeton
  • H. inversa
  • H. izonetae
  • H. leightonii
  • H. longipes
  • H. luteola
  • H. mastrucata
  • H. metuloidea
  • H. minutissima
  • H. mustialaensis
  • H. myxotricha
  • H. nigra
  • H. nothofaginea
  • H. panelloides
  • H. pergelatinosa
  • H. petalodes
  • H. petaloides
  • H. phalligera
  • H. pinacearum
  • H. pinicola
  • H. podocarpinea
  • H. recedens
  • H. reniformis
  • H. sciadia
  • H. silvana
  • H. testudo
  • H. tremula
  • H. tropicalis
  • H. unguicularis

External links

References

  1. Thorn RG. (2013). "Nomenclatural novelties" (PDF). Index Fungorum 16: 1–2. 
  2. Kirk PM, Cannon PF, Minter DW, Stalpers JA. (2008). Dictionary of the Fungi (10th ed.). Wallingford: CABI. p. 319. ISBN 978-0-85199-826-8. 


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