Abstraet: Phlebopus portentosus (Berk. and Broome) Boedijn is a favored wild edible mushroom in the Xishuangbanna region, Yunnan, China and Northern Thailand. It belongs to Boletinellaceae family and is known as "...Abstraet: Phlebopus portentosus (Berk. and Broome) Boedijn is a favored wild edible mushroom in the Xishuangbanna region, Yunnan, China and Northern Thailand. It belongs to Boletinellaceae family and is known as "black bolete". Its ecological habits and biotrophy are very complicated. It can be saprobic and successfully cultivated in mushroom house conditions. More often it grows closely with many plants, but is not mycorrhizal fungus. It forms a tripartite association with root mealy bugs and plants. The fungus produces special fungus-insect gall with the soil mealy bugs, which is a symbiotic association between these two creatures. The gall grows on plant roots with parasitic tendency. This paper is a compact report of the findings, including taxonomy, ecology, economic and cultivation of this mushroom.展开更多
基金Sincere thanks to Toni Atkinson for her editing of the paper. This study was supported by the Key Project of Applied Basic Research of Yunnan Province (No. 2017FA017), the Funds of Sci-Tech Innovation System Construction for Tropical Crops of Yunnan Province (No. RF2017-10), the Special Fund of Technological Development for Yunnan Institutions (No. 2015DC014), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31560008) and "Western Light"--Personnel Training Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. 326). This study was also supported by the New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Ltd..
文摘Abstraet: Phlebopus portentosus (Berk. and Broome) Boedijn is a favored wild edible mushroom in the Xishuangbanna region, Yunnan, China and Northern Thailand. It belongs to Boletinellaceae family and is known as "black bolete". Its ecological habits and biotrophy are very complicated. It can be saprobic and successfully cultivated in mushroom house conditions. More often it grows closely with many plants, but is not mycorrhizal fungus. It forms a tripartite association with root mealy bugs and plants. The fungus produces special fungus-insect gall with the soil mealy bugs, which is a symbiotic association between these two creatures. The gall grows on plant roots with parasitic tendency. This paper is a compact report of the findings, including taxonomy, ecology, economic and cultivation of this mushroom.