Sarcodon scabripes

Sarcodon scabripes is a species of fungus in the family Bankeraceae found in Asia, Europe, and North America. It was originally described in 1896 as Hydnum atroviride by Charles Horton Peck.[2] Howard James Banker transferred it to the genus Sarcodon in 1906.[3] The fungus makes fruit bodies with a drab gray to flesh-colored cap, and flesh that slowly turns olive-green when cut. In addition to the United States, where it was first documented, S. scabripes has been reported from Japan[4] and the Sverdlovsk Oblast region of Russia.[5]

Sarcodon scabripes
Scientific classification
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S. scabripes
Binomial name
Sarcodon scabripes
(Peck) Banker (1906)
Synonyms[1]
  • Hydnum scabripes Peck (1896)

References

  1. "GSD Species Synonymy: Sarcodon scabripes (Peck) Banker". Species Fungorum. CAB International. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  2. Peck CH. (1896). "Report of the Botanist (1894)". Annual Report on the New York State Museum of Natural History. 48: 103–337 (see p. 111).
  3. Banker HJ. (1906). "A contribution to a revision of the North American Hydnaceae". Memoirs of the Torrey Botanical Club. 12: 99–194 (see p. 148).
  4. Sejiro I, Kobayashi M. (1969). "コウタケ菌属に関する2-3の知見" [Notes on some Sarcodon sp.]. The Faculty Journal of Komazawa Women's Junior College. 3: 1–7.
  5. Shiryaev A. (2008). "Diversity and distribution of thelephoroid fungi (Basidiomycota, Thelephorales) in the Sverdlovsk region, Russia" (PDF). Folia Cryptogamica Estonica. 44: 131–141.


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