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SUILLELLUS":
9 articles found in Index.
RAMSHAJ Q., RUSEVSKA K., TOFILOVSKA S., KARADELEV M. (2021): Checklist of macrofungi from oak forests in the Republic of Kosovo. [fungi, taxa, Balkan Peninsula, diversity, ecology, rare species.] Czech Mycology 73(1): 21-42 (published: 12th February, 2021) Electronic supplement
abstract
In the period from 2017 to 2019 a survey of the diversity of fungi in oak forests in the Republic of Kosovo was conducted. The survey included 31 localities, mainly in Quercetum frainetto-cerris and Querco-Carpinetum orientalis communities. As a result of the fieldwork performed in various seasons, a first checklist of fungi from oak forests in the country is provided. A total of 220 taxa (219 species and one forma) were identified. The majority of the identified taxa belong to Basidiomycota (206) and only 14 species to Ascomycota. The paper provides a list of all recorded species with data on locality, altitude, time of collection, forest association and type of substrate. Distribution and ecology of selected rare or threatened species are briefly discussed.
JANDA V., KŘÍŽ M., KOLAŘÍK M. (2019): Butyriboletus regius and Butyriboletus fechtneri: typification of two well-known species [lectotype, epitype, nomenclature, taxonomy, Czech Republic] Czech Mycology 71(1): 1-32 (published: 2nd January, 2019)
abstract
The paper deals with type material of two species of the genus Butyriboletus, which were described from the Czech Republic, originally as Boletus regius (Krombholz 1983) and Boletus fechtneri (Velenovský 1922). For both species lectotypes are designated, for B. fechtneri also an epitype. The authors present macro- and microscopic descriptions of these species based on the study of rich material including collections from the area of the type localities. Characters distinguishing both species from similar taxa are discussed.
PARRA L.A., DELLA MAGGIORA M., SIMONINI G., TRASSINELLI R. (2017): Nomenclatural study and current status of the names Boletus emileorum, Boletus crocipodius and Boletus legaliae (Boletales), including typification of the first two. [fungi, nomenclature, Leccinellum crocipodium, Baorangia emileorum, Rubro-boletus legaliae] Czech Mycology 69(2): 163-192 (published: 24th November, 2017)
abstract
A comprehensive nomenclatural study including dates of valid publication, etymology and original spellings of the names Boletus “emilei”, Boletus “crokipodius” and Boletus “le-galiae” led us to correct them in accordance with the current Melbourne Code. Consequently, any current name based on these incorrect basionyms also has to be corrected. The original epithet emilei has been corrected by many authors, but never to its correct spelling emileorum according to the data of the protologue. As for the epithet crokipodium, all authors consulted have corrected it to crocipodium without any explanation, and its correct etymology has never been conveniently explained after its original publication by Letellier. We also provide good evidence on the correct date of publication of this name, always misdated in the literature. The epithet le-galiae (with a hyphen), unanimously corrected to legaliae has been very recently resurrected, but according to our nomenclatural study the correct spelling is legaliae. The valid publication and taxonomic status of the current combinations Leccinellum crocipodium, Baorangia emileorum, and Rubroboletus legaliae have also been studied. Finally, all the previous typifications of the three names have been revisited and we conclude that those of Boletus crocipodius and Boletus emileorum have not been effective and, therefore, a new typification is carried out here.
JANDA V., KŘÍŽ M., KONVALINKOVÁ T., BOROVIČKA J. (2017): Macroscopic variability of Rubroboletus legaliae with special regard to Boletus spinarii. [Boletus legaliae f. spinarii, ITS sequence data, neotype, epitype, Czech Republic] Czech Mycology 69(1): 31-50 (published: 12th May, 2017)
abstract
The paper deals with the macroscopic variability of Rubroboletus legaliae. A detailed macroscopic description of this species is presented, based on collections from the region of the type locality in Central Bohemia. An epitype is selected because of the age and insufficient representativeness of the holotype. The authors point out that Boletus spinarii, a species described by Hlaváček from South Bohemia as a member of the B. regius complex (genus Butyriboletus at present), is conspecific with the previously described Boletus legaliae (genus Rubroboletus at present); therefore the name B. spinarii is a synonymous name. The alleged distinguishing character of B. spinarii – orange, cinnabar to brick-red pores when young, soon changing colour to orange-yellow or yellow – is occasional according to our long-term field observations, caused possibly by external factors and not fixed within individual mycelia of R. legaliae. The taxonomic value of this deviation is not important enough to consider a separate taxon. Comparison of ITS rDNA sequences supports the conspecifity of both species. Although the name B. spinarii was validly published, the holotype was not deposited in the herbarium designated in the protologue. Therefore, a neotype is designated here.
JANDA V., KŘÍŽ M. (2016): Rubroboletus satanas f. crataegi, validly published name for xanthoid form of Rubroboletus satanas. [Boletus satanas, nomenclature, taxonomy] Czech Mycology 68(1): 109-110 (published: 6th June, 2016)
abstract
The name Rubroboletus is a validly published generic name for the group of boletes including Boletus satanas. Its xanthoid form, Boletus satanas f. crataegi, is validly transferred to the genus Rubroboletus with the aim of correcting two invalid earlier attempts.
ŠUTARA J. (2014): Anatomical structure of pores in European species of genera Boletus s.str. and Butyriboletus (Boletaceae). [Boletaceae, anatomy, pores, cheilocystidia] Czech Mycology 66(2): 157-170 (published: 23rd December, 2014)
abstract
One of the characteristic features of European species of genera Boletus s.str. and Butyriboletus is a conspicuous development of their cheilocystidia covering their pores in youth. The development of this type of cheilocystidia is partly supported by the growth of hyphae of the hymenophoral trama under the cheilocystidia. This special arrangement of cheilocystidia is an important diagnostic character distinguishing European species of the above-mentioned genera from other groups of boletes in Boletaceae. The microscopical structure of this type of pores is described in detail.
JANDA V., KŘÍŽ M., REJSEK J. (2014): Supplementary notes on Xerocomus chrysonemus (Boletaceae): bluing context and distribution in the Czech Republic. [Xerocomus chrysonemus, Boletaceae, distribution, ecology, bluing context, Czech Republic] Czech Mycology 66(2): 147-155 (published: 23rd December, 2014)
abstract
The paper summarises the current state of knowledge of the distribution and ecology of Xerocomus chrysonemus in the Czech Republic. The authors present information on newly discovered localities in the Czech Republic and a yet unobserved feature of the species – bluing of the context. A distribution map based on the collections from the Czech Republic is presented and features suitable for field identification are summarised, especially with regard to X. subtomentosus, which frequently occurs together with the species in question.
ŠUTARA J. (2008): Xerocomus s. l. in the light of the present state of knowledge. [Boletaceae, Xerocomus, Xerocomellus, Hemileccinum, generic taxonomy, anatomy, histology] Czech Mycology 60(1): 29-62 (published: 4th July, 2008)
abstract
The definition of the generic limits of Xerocomus s. l. and particularly the delimitation of this genus from Boletus is very unclear and controversial. During his study of European species of the Boletaceae, the author has come to the conclusion that Xerocomus in a wide concept is a heterogeneous mixture of several groups of species. These groups are separated from each other by different anatomical and some other characters. Also recent molecular studies show that Xerocomus s. l. is not a monophyletic group. In agreement with these facts, the European species of Xerocomus s. l. whose anatomy was studied by the present author are here classified into the following, more distinctly delimited genera: Xerocomus s. str., Phylloporus, Xerocomellus gen. nov., Hemileccinum gen. nov. and Pseudoboletus.Boletus badius and Boletus moravicus, also often treated as species of Xerocomus, are retained for the present in the genus Boletus. The differences between Xerocomus s. str., Phylloporus, Xerocomellus, Hemileccinum, Pseudoboletus and Boletus (which is related to this group of genera) are discussed in detail. Two new genera, Xerocomellus and Hemileccinum, and necessary new combinations of species names are proposed.
ŠUTARA J. (2005): Central European genera of the Boletaceae and Suillaceae, with notes on their anatomical characters. [Boletaceae, Suillaceae, generic taxonomy, anatomical characters] Czech Mycology 57(1-2): 1-50 (published: 31st August, 2005)
abstract
A taxonomic survey of Central European genera of the familiesBoletaceae and Suillaceae with tubular hymenophores, including the lamellate Phylloporus, is presented. Questions concerning the delimitation of the bolete genera ar ediscussed. Descriptions and keys to the families and genera are based predominantly on anatomical characters of the carpophores. Attention is also paid to peripheral layers of stipe tissue, whose anatomical structur ehas not been sufficiently studied. The study of these layers, above all of the caulohymenium and the lateral stipestratum, can provide information important for a better understanding of relationships between taxonomic groups in these families. The presence (or absence) of the caulohymenium with spore-bearing caulobasidia on the stipe surface is here considered as a significant generic character of boletes. A new combination, Pseudoboletus astraeicola (Imazeki) Šutara, is proposed.
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