Polyporoletus | |
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Genus: | Polyporoletus Snell (1936) |
Type species | |
Polyporoletus sublividus Snell (1936) | |
Species | |
P. sublividus |
Polyporoletus is a genus of fungi in the family Albatrellaceae. The genus was first described by mycologist Walter H. Snell in 1936 to accommodate an unusual terrestrial polypore with a stipe that had been found in the ground in pine-oak woods in Fentress County, Tennessee.[1] He named this specimen Polyporoletus sublividus; the generic name refers to the possible relationship to both the boletes and the polypores. Although this species would be later transferred to the genus Scutiger,[2] it is now considered to be Polyporoletus.[3] Currently there is only one other species in the genus, P. neotropicus Mata & Ryvarden (2007).
References
Wikispecies has information related to Polyporoletus.
- ↑ Snell WH. (1936). "Notes on boletes. V." Mycologia. 28 (5): 463–75. doi:10.2307/3754120.
- ↑ Singer R, Snell WH, White WL (1945). "The taxonomic position of Polyporus sublividus". Mycologia. 37 (1): 124–8. doi:10.2307/3754855.
- ↑ Ryvarden L, Gilbertson RL (1986). North American Polypores. Oslo, Norway: Fungiflora. ISBN 0-945345-06-2.
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