Tomentella
Tomentella radiosa, Austria
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Division:
Class:
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Genus:
Tomentella

Pers. ex Pat. (1887)
Type species
Tomentella ferruginea
(Pers.) Pat. (1887)
Synonyms[1]
  • Odontia Pers. (1794)
  • Odontium Rafinesque (1817)
  • Alytosporium (Link) Ehrenb. (1818)
  • Hypochnus Fr. (1818)
  • Sporotrichum subgen. Alytosporium Link (1818)
  • Caldesiella Sacc. (1877)
  • Phaeodon subgen. Hydnopsis J.Schröt. (1888)
  • Karstenia Britzelm. (1897)
  • Prillieuxia Sacc. & Syd. (1899)
  • Tomentellina Höhn. & Litsch. (1906)
  • Hydnopsis (J.Schröt.) Rea (1909)
  • Tomentellastrum Svrček (1958)

Tomentella is a genus of corticioid fungi in the family Thelephoraceae. The genus is ectomycorrhizal, and widespread, with about 80 species according to a 2008 estimate, although many new species have since been described.[2] Tomentella was circumscribed by French mycologist Narcisse Théophile Patouillard in 1887.[3]

Tomentella spores 1000x

Species

  • T. africanaBenin (West Africa)[4]
  • T. afrostuposa
  • T. agbassaensis
  • T. agereri[5]
  • Tomentella alpina[6]
  • T. angulospora
  • T. asperula
  • T. atroarenicolor
  • T. atrovirens
  • T. aurantiaca
  • T. badia
  • T. beaveraeSeychelles[7]
  • T. brevispina
  • T. brunneorufa
  • T. bryophila
  • T. calcicola
  • T. carbonaria
  • T. cinerascens
  • T. cinereoumbrina
  • T. clavigera
  • T. coerulea
  • T. crinalis
  • T. donkii
  • T. duemmeri
  • T. ellisii
  • T. epigaea
  • T. ferruginea
  • T. ferruginella
  • T. fibrosa
  • T. fragilis
  • T. fraseri
  • T. fungicola
  • T. furcata
  • T. fuscocinerea
  • T. fuscoferruginosa
  • T. galzinii
  • T. gigaspora
  • T. griseoumbrina
  • T. griseoviolacea – Canada[8]
  • T. guadalupensis
  • T. himalayanaHimalayas[9]
  • T. hjortstamiana – Seychelles[7]
  • T. indica – Himalayas[9]
  • T. intsiaeSeychelles[7]
  • T. italica
  • T. juncicola – Benin[10]
  • T. kentuckiensis
  • T. kootenaiensis
  • T. lapida
  • T. larssoniana – Seychelles[7]
  • T. lateritia
  • T. lilacinogrisea[8]
  • T. maroana[5]
  • T. microspora
  • T. molybdaea
  • T. muricata
  • T. nitellina
  • T. oligofibulaCanary Islands[11]
  • T. olivascens
  • T. parmastoana – Seychelles[7]
  • T. pellicularioidesTrinidad[8]
  • T. phylacteris
  • T. pilatii
  • T. pileocystidiata – Seychelles[7]
  • T. pilosa
  • T. pisoniae – Seychelles[7]
  • T. puberula
  • T. punicea
  • T. pyrolae
  • T. radiosa
  • T. retirugaRéunion[12]
  • T. scobinella
  • T. spinosispora
  • T. stuposa
  • T. subalpina
  • T. subamyloidea – Western Australia[13]
  • T. subcinerascens
  • T. subclavigera
  • T. subcorticioides – Himalayas[9]
  • T. sublilacina
  • T. subtestacea
  • T. subvinosa
  • T. tedersooi – Seychelles[7]
  • T. tenuis – Seychelles[7]
  • T. terrestris
  • T. testaceogilva
  • T. umbrinospora
  • T. variecolor
  • T. vesiculosa
  • T. viridescens
  • T. viridula

References

  1. "Tomentella Pers. ex Pat. 1874". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2011-11-15.
  2. Kirk PM, Cannon PF, Minter DW, Stalpers JA (2008). Dictionary of the Fungi (10th ed.). Wallingford, UK: CAB International. p. 693. ISBN 978-0-85199-826-8.
  3. Patouillard N. (1887). Les Hyménomycètes d'Europe (in French). p. 154.
  4. Yorou NS, Agerer R (2008). "Tomentella africana, a new species from Benin (West Africa) identified by morphological and molecular data". Mycologia. 100 (1): 68–80. doi:10.3852/mycologia.100.1.68. PMID 18488353. Open access icon
  5. 1 2 Yorou NS, Guelly AK, Agerer R (2011). "Anatomical and ITS rDNA-based phylogenetic identification of two new West African resupinate thelephoroid species". Mycoscience. 52 (6): 363–75. doi:10.1007/s10267-011-0117-4.
  6. Peintner U, Dämmrich F (2012). "Tomentella alpina, an important mycobiont of alpine ectotrophic plants". Mycological Progress. 11 (1): 109–19. doi:10.1007/s11557-010-0734-x.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Suvi T, Tedersoo L, Abarenkov K, Beaver K, Gerlach J, Kõljalg U (2010). "Mycorrhizal symbionts of Pisonia grandis and P. sechellarum in Seychelles: identification of mycorrhizal fungi and description of new Tomentella species". Mycologia. 102 (3): 522–33. doi:10.3852/09-147. PMID 20524585.
  8. 1 2 3 Wakefield EM. (1966). "Some extra-European species of Tomentella". Transactions of the British Mycological Society. 49 (3): 357–62. doi:10.1016/s0007-1536(66)80077-3.
  9. 1 2 3 Rattan SS. (1977). The resupinate Aphyllophorales of the North Western Himalayas. Bibliotheca Mycologica. Vol. 60. J. Cramer. ISBN 978-3768211727.
  10. Yorou NS, Agerer R (2007). "Tomentella furcata, a new species from Benin (West Africa) with basidia forming internal hyphae". Mycological Progress. 6 (4): 239–47. doi:10.1007/s11557-007-0543-z.
  11. Larsen MJ, Beltrán-Tejera E, Rodríguez-Armas JL (1994). "Tomentella oligofibula sp.nov. (Aphyllophorales, Thelephoraceae s. str.), from the Canary Islands". Mycotaxon. 52 (1): 109–12.
  12. Martini EC, Hentic R (2002). "Deux nouvelles espèces de champignons tomentelloides". Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France. 118 (2): 79–90.
  13. Agerer R, Bougher NL (2001). "Tomentella subamyloidea sp nov and T. radiosa (Thelephoraceae, Hymenomycetes, Basidiomycota) from Australia". Australian Systematic Botany. 14 (4): 607–14. doi:10.1071/SB00031.


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