Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886

Scientific name record
Names_Fungi record source
Is NZ relevant
This is a synonym
This record has collections
This record has descriptions

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

(Fr.) Cooke
Fr.
Cooke
1886
112
ICN
species
Poria xantha

Click to collapse Classification Info

xantha

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886

ARAUCARIACEAE. Agathis australis: Auckland, Waipoua Kauri Forest. FAGACEAE. Nothofagus fusca: Nelson, Golden Downs, 350 m. CUPRESSACEAE. Pseudotsuga douglasii: Auckland, Mt. Eden, 120 m; Rangitoto Island; Rotorua, 450 m. South Australia, Beaumont, Adelaide. PINACEAE. Pinus radiata: Auckland, Waipu; Whangarei; Oratia. Larix europaeus: Auckland, Mt. Albert, 50 m; Rotorua, 400 m. PODOCARPACEAE. Dacrydium cupressinum: Auckland, Epsom Show Grounds pavilion.
Hymenophore annual or perennial when stratose, adherent, ceraceous, brittle, effused forming linear areas 5-12 x 3-5 cm, 1-3 mm thick. Hymenial surface even, pallid cream, or sulphur yellow, when dry creviced, sometimes nodulose; margin irregular; lighter in colour, 2 mm or less wide, adherent, thinning out, fibrillose. Pores in strata, or not, round or angular, 5-6 per mm, 120-200 µm diameter, to 1.5 mm deep in each layer, dissepiments 200-275 µm thick, even, equal. Context pallid cream, 200-350 µm thick, of intertwined hyphae embedding crystals; skeletal hyphae 3.5-4 µm diameter, walls to 1.5 µm thick, aseptate, sparsely branched; generative hyphae 1.5-2 µm diameter, walls 0.2 µm thick, branched, septate, with abundant clamp connections, frequently encrusted with mucilage granules. Hymenial layer to 25 µm deep, a dense palisade of basidia and paraphyses. Basidia subclavate or cylindrical, 10-14 x 3.5-4 µm bearing 4 spores; sterigmata erect, to 4 µm, long. Paraphyses subclavate or cylindrical, sometimes obovate, 8-12 x 3-3.5 µm. Spores allantoid, 3.5-4.5 x 1-1.5 µm, walls smooth, hyaline, 0.1 µm thick.
DISTRIBUTION: Europe, North America, Australia, New Zealand.
HABITAT: Bark or decorticated wood of standing stumps, trunks, and worked timber, associated with a brown rot.
Specific features are the sulphur colour of the fragile hymenophore, moderate size of pores, thick dissepiments, allantoid spores, and usually one layer of pores. In two collections growing vertically on stumps, pores are stratose and arranged in small knobs as if plants were pileate. This condition has been named P. xantha forma pachymeres J. Eriksson (1949, p. 22). The species causes a destructive decay of building timbers, wood used in boat construction, and the like. Lowe (1958, p. 104) listed as additional synonyms P. greschkii Bres. and P. sulphurella (Peck) Sacc.
TYPE LOCALITY: Europe.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke (1886)
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke (1886)
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke (1886)
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke (1886)
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke (1886)

Click to collapse Collections Info

Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Finland
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
New Zealand
Auckland
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
New Zealand
Bay of Plenty
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
New Zealand
Buller
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
New Zealand
Nelson
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
New Zealand
Northland
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
New Zealand
Taupo
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
Sweden
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
United Kingdom
Poria xantha (Fr.) Cooke 1886
United States

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb19cc3-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
7 February 1995
29 October 2001
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top