Trametes elegans
| Trametes elegans | |
|---|---|
| |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Basidiomycota |
| Class: | Agaricomycetes |
| Order: | Polyporales |
| Family: | Polyporaceae |
| Genus: | Trametes |
| Species: | T. elegans
|
| Binomial name | |
| Trametes elegans | |
| Synonyms | |
| |
| Trametes elegans | |
|---|---|
| Mycological characteristics | |
| Pores on hymenium | |
| Cap is offset or indistinct | |
| Hymenium is decurrent | |
| Lacks a stipe | |
| Spore print is white | |
| Ecology is saprotrophic | |
| Edibility is inedible | |
Trametes elegans,[1] also known as Lenzites elegans and Daedalea elegans, is a common polypore and wood-decay fungus with a pantropical distribution found on hardwood hosts in regions including Australia, New Zealand, and Japan.[2][3] It has recently been suggested to be a complex of three different species: T. elegans, T. aesculi, and T. repanda. [4]
Morphology
The basidiocarp of T. elegans is brown with narrow semi-dadeloid pores.[5] The pore surface is yellow, with a dark line separating the lower context and the upper tomentum.[6] Defining characteristics of T. elegans include skeletal hyphae, thin-walled basidiospores, and a poroid hymenophore.[5] T. elegans has no stipe and has a corky texture. It is circular, sessile, and flabelliform in shape. It is flexible when fresh and becomes more rigid as it dries.[7] The fruiting body of T. elegans is leathery and grows alone on dead wood. It is off-white, velvety, and has aerial hyphae in secondary mycelial culture.[8]
Ecology
T. elegans shares a commensalistic relationship with various host plants where it provides protection to the plant against assault from other pathogens. Additionally, T. elegans is endophytic.[5] As T. elegans belongs to the white rot fungi group, they are important in breaking down lignin from trees and they do so extracellularly, non-specifically, and non-hydrolytically. This is important for recycling carbon in forest ecosystems.[9]
Habitat
T. elegans prefers an intermediate temperature range of around 25-35 °C and can grow in both the soil and on synthetic media.[10] Additionally, they prefer to inhabit rotting wood and leaf litter in tropical forests.[5] They prefer hardwood forests.[5]
Geographical distribution
Trametes elegans is most common in tropical hardwood forests. Places where it occurs include West Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and the southern United States.
References
- ^ "Species Fungorum - Species synonymy". www.speciesfungorum.org. Retrieved 2023-05-12.
- ^ Farr, D.F.; Rossman, A.Y. "Trametes elegans". Fungal Databases, U.S. National Fungus Collections, ARS, USDA. Archived from the original on 21 November 2018. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
- ^ Farr, D.F.; Rossman, A.Y. "Lenzites elegans". Fungal Databases, U.S. National Fungus Collections, ARS, USDA. Archived from the original on 21 November 2018. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
- ^ Carlson, Alexis; Justo, Alfredo; Hibbett, David S. (2014-07-01). "Species delimitation in Trametes: a comparison of ITS, RPB1, RPB2 and TEF1 gene phylogenies". Mycologia. 106 (4): 735–745. doi:10.3852/13-275. ISSN 0027-5514. PMID 24898532. S2CID 7529153.
- ^ a b c d e Kanakasundar, Arivananthan (1 Jan 2023). "Trametes elegans: Sources and Potential Medicinal and Food Applications". SHLS Life Sciences. 19 (1): 348–353.
- ^ Wahab, Afshan; Pfister, Donald H.; LoBuglio, Kathy; Din, Siraj Ud; Khalid, Abdul Nasir (2021). "Some New Records of Trametes (Polyporales, Basidiomycota); from Pakistan". Journal of Clinical Medical Research. 02 (2). doi:10.46889/jcmr.2021.2201.
- ^ Cody, B.; Grand, L.F. (March 2011). "Lenzites elegans profile" (PDF). Mycological Herbarium NCSU. NC State University.
- ^ Dulay RM, et al. (2021-01-30). "Nutritional and physical requirements for mycelial growth and basidiocarp production of Trametes elegans from the Philippines". Asian Journal of Agriculture and Biology. 2021 (1). Center for Tropical Mushroom Research and Development, Department of Biological Sciences, College of Science, Central Luzon State University, Science City of Munoz, Nueva Ecija, 3120 Philippines. doi:10.35495/ajab.2020.06.339. S2CID 226540784.
- ^ Osano, AA; Siboe, GM; Ochanda, IO; Kokwaro, JO (2005-01-17). "Biodegradation Properties of White Rot Fungi in Karura Forest, Kenya". Discovery and Innovation. 16 (1). doi:10.4314/dai.v16i1.15660. ISSN 1015-079X.
- ^ Sagar, Sukrit (2020). "Optimization of mycelia growth parameters forWild white rot fungi Trametes elegans and Trametes versicolor". Scopus Index Journal. 12 (1): 4–14.
