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Trametes cingulata Berk.

2023
Trametes cingulata Berk., Hooker’s J. Bot. Kew Gard. Misc. 6:164 (1854) Remarks: This species is recognizable by the sooty black colors on the glabrous, sometimes concentrically sulcate, pileus (Ryvarden 2015). Our specimen differs from the other recorded from Brazil (Abrahão & Gugliotta 2012) for having a homogeneous context, with no distinctive black
Regio, Nicolas do Carmo   +4 more
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Trametes Fr.

2023
Trametes Fr. T. colliculosa Berk., London J. Bot. 6: 506 (1847) /IF: 210050 Current name: Lenzites colliculosus (Berk.) D.A. Reid, in Oldridge, Pegler, Reid & Spooner, Kew Bull. 41(4): 860 (1986) (New classification: Polyporaceae, Polyporales, Agaricomycetes) Typification Details: Holotype K (M), Gardner 97, On dead wood, Sri Lanka ...
Karunarathna, Samantha C.   +24 more
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Trametes hirsuta Lloyd

2023
Published as part of Zhang, Xiaojie, Yuan, Qi, Su, Jiangqing & Zhao, Changlin, 2023, Diversity of wood-decaying fungi in Zixishan area (Hengduan Mountains), Yunnan Province, China, pp.
Zhang, Xiaojie   +3 more
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Trametes suaveolens

2007
Boletus suaveolens Linnaeus, Species Plantarum 2: 1177. 1753. "Habitat in Salice." RCN: 8472. Type not designated. Original material: none traced. Current name: Trametes suaveolens (L.: Fr.) Fr. (Polyporaceae). Note: See Gams (in Taxon 41: 103-104. 1992) on Fries’ interpretation of this name.
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Trametes versicolor

2006
Enthält 1 Bild des Schmetterlings-Porlings.
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Characterisation of cellobiose dehydrogenases from the white-rot fungi Trametes pubescens and Trametes villosa

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, 2004
Cellobiose dehydrogenase (CDH) is an extracellular haemoflavoenzyme that is produced by a number of wood-degrading and phytopathogenic fungi and it has a proposed role in the early events of lignocellulose degradation and wood colonisation. In the presence of a suitable electron acceptor, e.g.
R, Ludwig   +6 more
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Trametes hirsuta

2006
Enthält 2 Bilder der Striegeligen Tramete.
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Hyphal interference by Trametes hispida

Canadian Journal of Microbiology, 1977
The antagonistic activity of Trametes hispida Bagl. in dual culture with Hirschioporus species and other non-basidiomycetous fungi is interpreted as hyphal interference. Hyphae of T. hispida grow into and over colonies of sensitive fungi. Contact with hyphae of T.
J A, Traquair, W E, McKeen
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Trametes serpens

1920
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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