Trametes pubescens

Trametes pubescens is a small, thin polypore, or bracket fungus. It has a cream-colored, finely velvety cap surface. Unlike most other turkey tail-like species of Trametes, the cap surface lacks strongly contrasting zones of color.

Trametes pubescens
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Polyporales
Family: Polyporaceae
Genus: Trametes
Species:
T. pubescens
Binomial name
Trametes pubescens
(Schumach.) Pilát (1939)
Synonyms

Trametes pubescens is an annual, saprobic fungus, a decomposer of the deadwood of hardwoods, growing in clusters on logs, stumps and downed branches. (It is rarely reported on conifer wood.) It is a purported plant pathogen, infecting peach and nectarine trees.[1] It is inedible.[2]

The genome of T. pubescens has been published in 2017 by Zoraide Granchi and coworkers from the OPTIBIOCAT project. [3] The genome contains 39.7 million bases. The consortium estimates that there are 14,451 different genes, which is quite average among saprobic wood-rotting species. The sequencing has been performed in Leiden, The Netherlands [4]

See also

References

  1. "Trametes pubescens". mushroomexpert.com.
  2. Phillips, Roger (2010). Mushrooms and Other Fungi of North America. Buffalo, NY: Firefly Books. p. 317. ISBN 978-1-55407-651-2.
  3. Granchi Z; Peng M; Chi-A-Woeng T; de Vries RP; Hildén K; Mäkelä MR (2017). "Genome Sequence of the Basidiomycete White-Rot Fungus Trametes pubescens FBCC735". Genome Announc. 5 (8): e01643-16. doi:10.1128/genomeA.01643-16. PMC 5323618. PMID 28232439.
  4. "OPTIBIOCAT partner GenomeScan".


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