Biology:Amylostereum laevigatum

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Short description: Species of fungus

Amylostereum laevigatum
2011-10-24 Amylostereum laevigatum (Fr.) Boidin 203093.jpg
Scientific classification
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Species:
A. laevigatum
Binomial name
Amylostereum laevigatum
(Fr.) Boidin (1958)
Synonyms[1]
  • Thelephora laevigata Fr. (1828)
  • Corticium laevigatum (Fr.) Fr. (1838)
  • Peniophora laevigata (Fr.) P.Karst. (1881)
  • Xerocarpus laevigatus (Fr.) P.Karst. (1881)
  • Hymenochaete laevigata (Fr.) Massee (1890)
  • Terana laevigata (Fr.) Kuntze (1891)
  • Kneiffia laevigata (Fr.) Bres. (1903)
  • Gloeocystidiellum laevigatum (Fr.) Y.Hayashi (1974)

Amylostereum laevigatum (yew duster[2]) is a species of crust fungus in the family Amylostereaceae. Originally named Thelephora laevigata by Elias Fries in 1828, it was given its current name when transferred to the genus Amylostereum by French mycologist Jacques Boidin in 1958.[3]

Ecology

Amylostereum laevigatum is known from Norway, Sweden, France, Switzerland, Canada and the United States, where it occurs on Abies, Juniperus, Taxus and Thuja. The fungus first appeared in Japan as a symbiont of the Japanese horntail (Urocerus japonicus), being injected into the sapwood of the Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) and the Japanese cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa) trees when the female horntail oviposited beneath the bark.[4]

References

  1. "Amylostereum laevigatum (Fr.) Boidin 1958". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. http://www.mycobank.org/BioloMICS.aspx?Table=Mycobank&Rec=1287&Fields=All. 
  2. https://www.britmycolsoc.org.uk/field_mycology/english-names
  3. Boidin, Jacques; Lanquetin, P. (1984). "Le genre Amylostereum (Basidiomycetes) intercompatibilités entre espèces allopatriques" (in French). Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France 100 (2): 211–236. 
  4. Tabata, Masanobu; Abe, Yasuhisa (1997). "Amylostereum laevigatum associated with the Japanese horntail, Urocerus japonicus" (in en). Mycoscience 38 (4): 421–427. doi:10.1007/BF02461682. ISSN 1618-2545. 

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q1772710 entry