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Species of fungus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pleurotus dryinus, commonly known as the veiled oyster mushroom,[1] is a species of fungus in the family Pleurotaceae. It grows on dead wood and is also a weak pathogen; infecting especially broad-leaved trees.
Pleurotus dryinus | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Basidiomycota |
Class: | Agaricomycetes |
Order: | Agaricales |
Family: | Pleurotaceae |
Genus: | Pleurotus |
Species: | P. dryinus |
Binomial name | |
Pleurotus dryinus | |
Synonyms | |
Agaricus acerinus |
Pleurotus dryinus | |
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Gills on hymenium | |
Cap is offset | |
Hymenium is decurrent | |
Stipe has a ring | |
Spore print is white | |
Ecology is saprotrophic or parasitic | |
Edibility is edible |
The species name is a Latinised version of the Greek word "dryinos" (δρύῐνος), meaning "related to oak", which refers to one of its main hosts.[2]
The original definition of this fungus as Agaricus dryinus was made by Persoon in 1800.[3] In 1871 in his "Führer in die Pilzkunde" ("Guide to mycology"), Paul Kummer introduced Pleurotus as a genus and defined three similar ringed species: Pleurotus corticatus, Pleurotus Albertini and P. dryinus. They were distinguished because only P. corticatus has intertwined ("anastomosing") gills on the stem and P. Albertini is bigger and grows on conifer wood rather than oak. However, nowadays all three are considered to be forms of the same species.[4] The name dryinus takes precedence because it is the oldest.[5]
Also, in 1874 Fries defined a species Pleurotus tephrotrichus, having a deeper grey colour, which again has been incorporated into P. dryinus but may be distinguished as the variety P. dryinus var. tephrotrichus.[6]
The English name "Veiled Oyster Mushroom" has been given to this species.[7]
The following sections use the given references throughout.[8][9][10][11]
This mushroom is saprobic on dead wood and can also be a weak parasite of trees. It occurs especially on oak (from which it derives its name), but also on beech, other broad-leaved trees, and occasionally on conifers. It is often solitary or may grow in small groups.
Appearing from summer to autumn, it is distributed throughout Europe, where it varies locally between common and rare.[9] It is also found in North America.[13]
In the following table, Species Fungorum is a general reference for the names.[5]
Designation, author & date of related mushroom | Relationship & status | Characteristics |
---|---|---|
Hypsizygus ulmarius (Bull.) Gray (1821) | This mushroom, which has been classified as a Pleurotus, is reportedly easy to mistake for P. dryinus.[14] | The gills are only slightly decurrent, no ring. |
Lentinus levis (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Murrill (1915) | This American mushroom, which has been classified as a Pleurotus, is reportedly easy to mistake for P. dryinus.[14] | It has no cap scales and no ring or veil remnants, and the felty surface is different.[15] |
Pleurotus albertinii [Fr.) Sacc. (1887) | Once defined as a separate species, now part of P. dryinus. | Larger than var. dryinus and grows on conifer wood rather than deciduous. |
Pleurotus calyptratus (Lindblad ex Fr.) Sacc. (1887) | A similar but currently valid species, also with prominent veil remnants. | Smells of flour,[12] little or no stipe, cap smooth, only grows on poplar.[10] |
Pleurotus corticatus (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871) | Once defined as a separate species, now part of P. dryinus, may be considered a variety. | Has intertwined ("anastomosing") gills on the stem. |
Pleurotus dryinus var. dryinus P. Kumm (1871) | This name may be used to distinguish normal P. dryinus from proposed varieties. | |
Pleurotus dryinus var. tephrotrichus (Fr.) Damblon & Lambinon (1959) | Once defined as a separate species, now part of P. dryinus, may be considered a variety. | Greyer than var. dryinus. |
This mushroom is edible, though it is tough when older and inferior to the better-known Pleurotus species.[16][9][7]
It is a mild parasite of broad-leaved trees (a "white rot").[10]
Like some other Pleurotus species, P. dryinus attacks nematodes and may provide a control method for these parasites when they infect cats and dogs.[citation needed]
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