Biology:Meshimakobu
Mature Sanghuangporus sanghuang mushrooms on a tree[1] |
Meshimakobu[note 1] and sanghuang / sanghwang,[note 2] also known as mesima (English) or black hoof mushroom (American English), is a mushroom in East Asia.
Understanding of the concept
Etymology and association with mulberry
The Japanese name メシマコブ is composed of メシマ, an island of Gotō, Nagasaki, where this mushroom used to grow, and コブ, which means bump, referring to the mushroom's appearance. Per Wu et al. (2012) citing Ito (1955) and Imazeki and Hongo (1989), this is a mushroom that is always said to be on mulberry trees.[2]
The Chinese name 桑黃 / 桑黄 is composed of 桑 ("mulberry tree") and 黃 / 黄 ("yellow"). The Korean name 상황 is from Chinese.
Historical records
The earliest attestation of the name 桑黃 is in Yaoxing Lun.[3]
Various Chinese historical records documented Xinzhou sanghuang (信州桑黃), in which Xinzhou is a place name in modern-day Jiangxi. It was depicted with hair-like objects, apparently describing Inonotus hispidus.[4]
Folk understandings
In Tonghua, Jilin, various mushrooms were seen as sanghuang by the locals, where it was used to treat cancer and stomach illnesses. The report described the mushrooms and attached photos, but didn't identify them by Latin names.[5]
Associated taxons
Phellinus linteus
It had been long thought that this mushroom is Phellinus linteus, which is a view whose earlier iteration, that this mushroom is Phellinus yucatanensis, can be traced back to Japanese academic literacies in early 20th century based on specimens identified as Fomes yucatanensis, later deemed a synonym of P. linteus.[2]
Polyporus linteus is a species named by Miles Joseph Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis in 1860 with the specimen from Nicaragua.[6] Shu Chün Teng in 1963 renamed it Phellinus linteus.[7]
Dai and Xu (1998) studied specimens from various East Asian regions, and found them morphologically different from American Phellinus linteus; the study concluded that Phellinus linteus is not found in East Asia. The study deemed Phellinus linteus exist in tropical America with specimens from there, and Africa with the type specimen of Xanthochrous rudis.[8]
Zhou et al. (2015) examined two African specimens that morphologically fit X. rudis, and their sequences formed a distinct clade from P. linteus. Hence, X. rudis regained standalone taxon status and was renamed Tropicoporus rudis. And Phellinus linteus, now Tropicoporus linteus, is a tropical American species.[9]
Phellinus igniarius
Liu (1974) treated Phellinus igniarius as sanghuang.[10]
Sanghuangporus baumii
Phellinus baumii was the name for this mushroom seen in Dai and Xu (1998).[8] Phellinus baumii is known as Sanghuangporus baumii from 2015 on.[9]
Sanghuangporus vaninii
Xie et al. (2010) inspected sanghuang strains from various institutions with molecular methods, whose test results were analyzed by Wu et al. (2012) to contain Inonotus vaninii (formerly Phellinus vaninii).[2] This mushroom is from 2015 known as Sanghuangporus vaninii.[9]
Sanghuangporus sanghuang
Inonotus sanghuang was seen as this mushroom in Wu et al. (2012). It only grows on mulberry trees.[2][note 3] It was renamed Sanghuangporus sanghuang in 2015.[9]
Inonotus hispidus
Inonotus hispidus was seen as sanghuang in Bao et al. (2017).[4] I. hispidus grows on various broad-leaf trees, including mulberry trees.[1]
Folk medicine
There is insufficient evidence from clinical studies to indicate its use as a prescription drug to treat cancer or any disease.[12][13]
In Asian folk medicine, the mushroom is prepared as a tea. Its processed mycelium may be sold as a dietary supplement in the form of capsules, pills or powder.[13]
See also
Notes
- ↑ Japanese: メシマコブ; Revised Hepburn: meshimakobu; Nihon-shiki: mesimakobu
- ↑ Chinese: 桑黃 (trad.) / 桑黄 (simp.); pinyin: sānghuáng
Korean: 상황 / 상황버섯; Revised Romanization: sanghwang / sanghwangbeoseot - ↑ Wu and Dai (2020) stated that S. sanghuang grows only on Morus australis and occationally domestic mulberries, chiefly Morus alba trees.[1] Fang et al. (2022) disagreed, said that Wu and Dai (2020) mistakenly assumed the relationship between palmately divided leaves and Morus australis, and stated that S. sanghuang is so far known growing only on Morus mongolica and Morus mongolica var. diabolica.[11]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "药用真菌桑黄的种类解析". 菌物学报 39 (5): 781–794. 2020. doi:10.13346/j.mycosystema.190354. https://manu40.magtech.com.cn/Jwxb/CN/10.13346/j.mycosystema.190354.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Species clarification for the medicinally valuable “sanghuang” mushroom". Botanical Studies 53: 135–149. 2012. http://ejournal.sinica.edu.tw/bbas/content/2012/1/Bot531-13.pdf.
- ↑ "桑黄的分类及开发前景". 菌物研究 14 (4): 187–200. 2016. doi:10.13341/j.jfr.2014.6401.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "“桑黄”的本草补充考证". 菌物研究 15 (4): 264–270. 2017. doi:10.13341/j.jfr.2014.1171.
- ↑ "吉林省几种野生民间“桑黄”的真伪鉴别". 中国农学通报 30 (16): 238–247. 2014. doi:10.11924/j.issn.1000-6850.2013-2565.
- ↑ "Four Hundred and Fifty-Seventh Meeting. December 14, 1858. [...]". Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 4: 122. 1860. doi:10.2307/20021226.
- ↑ Teng SC (邓叔群) (1963). 中国的真菌. 科学出版社. pp. 467, 762.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 "Studies on the medicinal polypore, Phellinus baumii and its kin, P. linteus". Mycotaxon 67: 191–200. 1998.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "Global diversity and taxonomy of the Inonotus linteus complex (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota): Sanghuangporus gen. nov., Tropicoporus excentrodendri and T. guanacastensis gen. et spp. nov., and 17 new combinations". Fungal Diversity 77: 335–347. 2016. doi:10.1007/s13225-015-0335-8.
- ↑ Liu B (刘波) (1974). 中国药用真菌. 山西人民出版社. pp. 71–73.
- ↑ "桑黄的属性考证". 蚕业科学 48 (2): 141–151. 2022. doi:10.13441/j.cnki.cykx.2022.02.007.
- ↑ "Phellinus linteus". Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. 26 September 2019. https://www.mskcc.org/cancer-care/integrative-medicine/herbs/phellinus-linteus#msk_professional.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 "Phellinus linteus mycelium; DB14282". DrugBank. 2021. https://go.drugbank.com/drugs/DB14282.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meshimakobu.
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