Search results for "Basidiocarp"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Ecology, Phylogeny, and Potential Nutritional and Medicinal Value of a Rare White “Maitake” Collected in a Mediterranean Forest

2020

Albino Grifola frondosa (Dicks.) Gray &ldquo

0106 biological sciencesGrifola frondosabioprospectingBiology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesDry weightStaphylococcus epidermidisBotanypolypore fungupolypore fungusMediterranean forestInternal transcribed spacer<i>Grifola frondosa</i>lcsh:QH301-705.5Ribosomal DNAGrifola frondosa030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape Conservation0303 health sciencesMushroomEcologySettore BIO/02 - Botanica SistematicaEcological Modeling<i>Quercus pubescens</i>ITS rDNAbiology.organism_classificationGrifolaAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)medicinal mushroomfungal diversityphylogeneticslcsh:Biology (General)Quercus pubescensSettore BIO/03 - Botanica Ambientale E ApplicataBasidiocarpphylogenetic010606 plant biology & botanybasidiomyceteDiversity
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Anthropogenic disturbance and diversity of species: polypores and polypore-associated beetles in forest, forest edge and clear-cut

2005

In boreal coniferous forests, artificial edges often modify the habitat, increasing the likelihood that the diversity and composition of species changes. This study examined the assemblage of polypores and polypore-associated beetles at the edge of mature managed spruce-dominated forests and clear-cuts. The highest number of polypore occurrences and the greatest diversity of polypore species occurred at the clear-cut. In south-facing edges polypores occurred closer to the edge both in clear-cut and in forest than in the north-facing edges. The number of polypore-associated beetle individuals was greatest in the clear-cut, but there was no effect of edge on species richness of beetles. Orien…

BorealDisturbance (ecology)HabitatPolyporeEcologyBasidiocarpBiodiversityForestrySpecies richnessBiologyEdge (geometry)biology.organism_classificationScandinavian Journal of Forest Research
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First Report of Armillaria Butt Rot Caused by Armillaria mellea on Phoenix canariensis in Italy.

2007

During 2006, in a garden in the Mount Etna Piedmont, eastern Sicily (Italy), a 40-year-old specimen of Canary Island date palm (Phoenix canariensis hort. ex Chabaud) with a trunk circumference at breast height of 220 cm showed a rotted lesion with a viscous, brown ooze at the stem base and root initials. The lesion extended to approximately one-third of the trunk circumference. Trunk excavation exposed a wet rot of internal tissues, a cream-colored mycelial mat, and a mushroom-like smell. Although the rot spread inward (approximately 25 cm deep) with decay of nonlignified ground tissues and blackening of wood fibers, the palm did not show symptoms on the canopy. Conversely, ferns, apricot,…

CanopyArmillariabiologyPhoenix canariensisBotanyBasidiocarpPlant ScienceArmillaria melleaButt rotbiology.organism_classificationPalmAgronomy and Crop ScienceTrunkPlant disease
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