- Source: Hohenbuehelia
Hohenbuehelia is a pleurotoid genus of agaric fungi characterized by gelatinous-sheathed bowling-pin-shaped cystidia, on conidia, basidiospore germ tubes, and mycelium that adhere to and capture nematodes. The fruitbodies bear thick-walled cystidia (metuloids) in the hymenium along the gill sides and that differentiate the genus from Pleurotus in the Pleurotaceae family. The genus has a widespread distribution and contains about 50 species.
Etymology
Named after — Ludwig Samuel Joseph David Alexander Freiherr von Hohenbühel Heufler zu Rasen und Perdonegg (1817-1885) - an Austrian baron and cryptogamist.
Species
References
External links
G. Barron`& Hohenbuehelia nematode traps
Tom Volk & Hohenbuehelia'
"Hohenbuehelia Schulzer". Atlas of Living Australia.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Hohenbuehelia
- Hohenbuehelia petaloides
- Pleurotus
- Pleurotaceae
- Pleurotus ostreatus
- Basidiomycota
- Nematoctonus
- Sarcomyxa serotina
- Glossary of mycology
- Zinc finger protein 229