Trametes gibbosa

Trametes gibbosa, commonly known as the lumpy bracket, is a polypore mushroom that causes a white rot. It is found on beech stumps and the dead wood of other hardwood species. Fruit bodies are 8–15 cm in diameter and semicircular in shape. The upper surface is usually gray or white, but may be greenish in older specimens due to algal growth. Elongated pores are located on the under-surface. The fruiting bodies are frequently attacked by boring beetle larvae.

Trametes gibbosa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Polyporales
Family: Polyporaceae
Genus: Trametes
Species:
T. gibbosa
Binomial name
Trametes gibbosa
(Pers.) Fr. (1836)
Synonyms

Agarico-suber scalptum
Paulet 1793
Bulliardia virescens
Lázaro Ibiza 1916
Daedalea gibbosa
(Pers.) Pers. 1801
Daedalea virescens
(Lázaro Ibiza) Sacc. & Trotter 1925
Lenzites gibbosa
(Pers.) Hemmi 1939
Merulius gibbosus
Pers. 1795
Polyporus gibbosus
(Pers.) P. Kumm. 1871
Polystictus kalchbrenneri
(Fr.) Cooke 1886
Pseudotrametes gibbosa
(Pers.) Bondartsev & Singer 1944
Pseudotrametes gibbosa
forma tenuis (Pilát) anon. ined.
Trametes crenulata
Berk. 1854
Trametes gibbosa var. tenuis
(Pilát) anon. ined.
Trametes gibbosa forma tenuis Pilát 1940
Trametes kalchbrenneri
Fr. 1868
Trametes nigrescens
Lázaro Ibiza 1916

Trametes gibbosa
float
Mycological characteristics
pores on hymenium
cap is offset
hymenium is decurrent
stipe is bare
spore print is white to cream
ecology is saprotrophic
edibility: inedible

See also

References


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