fbpx
Wikipedia

Lepiota

Lepiota is a genus of gilled mushrooms in the family Agaricaceae. All Lepiota species are ground-dwelling saprotrophs with a preference for rich, calcareous soils. Basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are agaricoid with whitish spores, typically with scaly caps and a ring on the stipe. Around 400 species of Lepiota are currently recognized worldwide. Many species are poisonous, some lethally so.

Lepiota
Lepiota clypeolaria, the type species
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Agaricaceae
Genus: Lepiota
(Pers.) Gray (1821)
Type species
Lepiota clypeolaria
Synonyms
  • Fusispora Fayod (1889)
  • Lepidotus Clem. (1902)
  • Lepiotula (Maire) Locq. ex E.Horak (1968)
  • Morobia E.Horak (1979)
  • Amogaster Castellano (1995)

Taxonomy edit

History edit

Agaricus section Lepiota was originally published in 1797 by South African-born mycologist Christian Hendrik Persoon.[1] It was subsequently raised to the rank of genus by Samuel Frederick Gray. As originally conceived, the genus was a mix of agarics with rings on their stems, including species now placed in Armillaria, Cortinarius, and Pholiota.[2] In 1822, however, the influential Swedish mycologist Elias Magnus Fries restricted Lepiota to white-spored, ringed agarics.[3]

Based on macro- and micromorphology, later authors gradually refined the generic concept of Lepiota. Some unrelated genera, such as Cystoderma (Fayod 1889) and Limacella (Earle 1909), were removed from the genus whilst several related genera, including Leucocoprinus (Patouillard 1888), Macrolepiota and Leucoagaricus (Singer 1948), Cystolepiota (Singer 1952), and Echinoderma (Bon 1991) were separated off. These segregated genera, together with Lepiota itself, are still often grouped together as Lepiota s.l. (sensu lato = "in the wide sense") or as the "lepiotoid" fungi.[4][5][6][7]

The secotioid species Amogaster viridiglebus, described in 1996 and initially placed in the order Boletales,[8] was later determined to be a member of Lepiota, and officially transferred to the genus in 2013.[9]

Current status edit

Following some discussion over the type species,[10] Lepiota has now been conserved under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, typified by Agaricus colubrinus Pers. (= Lepiota clypeolaria).[11] Recent molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, suggests that the morphological concept of Lepiota s.s. (sensu stricto = in the strict or narrow sense) is soundly based.[5][12][13]

The name "Lepiota" is derived from the Greek λεπις (= "scale") + οὖς (= "ear").[14]

Description edit

Fruit bodies of Lepiota species are almost all agaricoid (Lepiota viridigleba is the sole sequestrate species in the genus[9]), most (but not all) having comparatively small caps (less than 10 cm (4 in) in diameter) and slender stems. The cap cuticle (surface skin) typically splits as the cap expands, breaking up into concentric rings of scales towards the margin. The gills beneath the cap are white to cream (rarely yellow) and are free (not joined to the stem). The gills are covered by a partial veil when young, which typically ruptures to leave a cuff-like ring (sometimes ephemeral) often with additional scaly remains on the stem. Several species have a distinct, often rubbery, smell. The spore print is white to cream. The spores are usually (but not always) dextrinoid (turning red-brown in an iodine-based reagent).[4][15]

Habitat and distribution edit

Most if not all Lepiota species are nitrophilic, with a preference for calcareous soils. They typically occur in rich humus in broadleaf or conifer woodland, in northern Europe often among nettles (Urtica dioica) or dog's mercury (Mercurialis perennis). A few species are more frequently found in calcareous grassland or in dunes.[15] The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution, but with a preference for warm areas, meaning there are fewer species in colder climates. Around 400 species are currently recognized worldwide.[16]

Toxicity edit

Several species contain amatoxins and are lethally poisonous, if consumed.[17] Those known to have caused fatalities include Lepiota brunneoincarnata,[18][19] L. brunneolilacea,[20] L. castanea,[21] L. helveola,[21][22] and L. subincarnata (synonym L. josserandii).[23] No Lepiota species is recommended as edible.[15]

Literature edit

No comprehensive monograph of the genus has yet been published. In Europe, however, species of Lepiota were illustrated and described in a regional guide by Candusso & Lanzoni (1990)[4] and more briefly in descriptive keys by Bon (1993).[15] Dutch species were illustrated and described by Vellinga (2001).[24] No equivalent modern guides have been published for North America, but Vellinga (2008) has published an online bibliography of the relevant literature.[25] In Australia, a guide to the Lepiota species of south-eastern Queensland was published by Aberdeen (1992).[6] In Asia, a study of Lepiota diversity in northern Thailand revealed 73 species.[26]

List of species edit

The following species have individual entries:

The following species have individual entries, but are now placed in different genera:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Persoon CH. (1797). Tentamen dispositionis methodicae Fungorum (in Latin). Leipzig, Germany: Wolf. p. 68.
  2. ^ Gray SF. (1821). A natural arrangement of British plants. Vol. 1. London: Baldwin, Cradock and Joy. p. 601. Retrieved 2011-08-05.
  3. ^ Fries EM. (1821). Systema Mycologicum. Vol. 1. Lund, Sweden: Ex Officina Berlingiana. p. 19. Retrieved 2011-08-05.
  4. ^ a b c Candusso M, Lanzoni G (1990). Fungi Europaei 4: Lepiota s.l.. Alassio, Italy: Edizioni Candusso. p. 743.
  5. ^ a b Johnson J, Vilgalys R (1998). "Phylogenetic systematics of Lepiota sensu lato based on nuclear large subunit rDNA evidence". Mycologia. 90 (6): 971–979. doi:10.2307/3761269. JSTOR 3761269.
  6. ^ a b Aberdeen EC. (2001). Lepiotoid genera (Agaricales) in south-eastern Queensland. Gailes, Queensland: Aberdeen Publications. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-9596526-4-2.
  7. ^ Bon M. (1991). "Les genres Echinoderma (Locq. ex Bon) st. nov. et Rugosomyces Raithelhuber ss lato". Documents Mycologiques (in French). 21 (82): 61–66.
  8. ^ Castellano MA. (1995). "NATS truffle and truffle-like fungi 4: Amogaster viridigleba gen. et sp.nov., a new truffle-like fungus from the Sierra Nevada". Mycotaxon. 55: 185–8.
  9. ^ a b Ge Z-W, Smith ME (2013). "Phylogenetic analysis of rDNA sequences indicates that the sequestrate Amogaster viridiglebus is derived from within the agaricoid genus Lepiota (Agaricaceae)". Mycological Progress. 12 (1): 151–5. doi:10.1007/s11557-012-0841-y. S2CID 18543761.
  10. ^ Donk MA. (1962). "The generic names proposed for Agaricaceae". Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia. 5: 1–320. ISSN 0078-2238.
  11. ^ International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (Vienna Code, 2006), Appendix III . Archived from the original on 2012-10-06. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  12. ^ Vellinga EC. (2003). "Phylogeny of Lepiota (Agaricaceae) - Evidence from nrITS and nrLSU sequences". Mycological Progress. 2 (4): 305–322. doi:10.1007/s11557-006-0068-x. S2CID 13944947.
  13. ^ Vellinga EC. (2004). "Genera in the family Agaricaceae – Evidence from nrITS and nrLSU sequences". Mycological Research. 108 (Pt 4): 354–377. doi:10.1017/S0953756204009700. PMID 15209277. S2CID 42847042.
  14. ^ Rea C. (1922). British Basidiomycetaceae: a handbook of the larger British fungi. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 799.
  15. ^ a b c d Bon M. (1993). Flore mycologique d'Europe 3: Les Lepiotes. Amiens Cedex: CRDP de Picardie. p. 153.
  16. ^ Kirk PM, Cannon PF, Minter DW, Stalpers JA (2008). Dictionary of the Fungi (10th ed.). Wallingford, UK: CABI. ISBN 978-0-85199-826-8.
  17. ^ Benjamin DR. (1995). Mushrooms, poisons and panaceas: A handbook for naturalists, mycologists, and physicians. New York: W H Freeman & Co. p. 422. ISBN 978-0-7167-2649-4.
  18. ^ Puig Hernández, A; Chumillas Córdoba, C; Camprodón Calveras, J; De Francisco Enciso, E; Furió Marco, MP; Ferrán Martínez, G (2002). "Intoxicación fatal por Lepiota bruneoincarnata". Anales de Medicina Interna. 18 (9): 481–2. doi:10.4321/s0212-71992001000900007. PMID 11715136.
  19. ^ Ben Khelil M, et al. (2010). "Intoxication mortelle par Lepiota brunneoincarnata : à propos de 4 cas". Annales de Biologie Clinique. 68 (5): 561–567. doi:10.1684/abc.2010.0467. PMID 20870578.
  20. ^ Boiffard J. (1987). "Une intoxication familiale par Lepiota brunneolilacea". Documents Mycologiques. 69: 21–23.
  21. ^ a b Paydas, S; et al. (1990). "Poisoning due to amatoxin-containing Lepiota species". British Journal of Clinical Practice. 44 (11): 450–453. PMID 2282295.
  22. ^ Işiloğlu M, Watling R (1991). "Poisonings by Lepiota helveola Bres. in southern Turkey". Edinburgh Journal of Botany. 48: 91–100. doi:10.1017/S0960428600003668.
  23. ^ Haines, JH; Lichstein, E; Glickerman, D. (1986). "A fatal poisoning from an amatoxin containing Lepiota". Mycopathologia. 93 (1): 15–7. doi:10.1007/BF00437009. PMID 3960099. S2CID 28756785.
  24. ^ Vellinga EC. (2001). Genus Lepiota in Flora Agaricina Neerlandica 5. Lisse, Netherlands: AA Balkema. pp. 109–151. ISBN 978-90-5410-494-0.
  25. ^ Vellinga EC. (2008). Bibliography of North American Lepiota species – v. 2.1 http://nature.berkeley.edu/brunslab/ev/americanlepiotaliterature_2.1.pdf
  26. ^ Sysouphanthonga P, Hyde KD, Vellinga EC (2013). "Diversity of Lepiota (Agaricales) in northern Thailand". Mycology. 4 (1): 22–28. doi:10.1080/21501203.2013.764358. S2CID 82743099.

lepiota, genus, gilled, mushrooms, family, agaricaceae, species, ground, dwelling, saprotrophs, with, preference, rich, calcareous, soils, basidiocarps, fruit, bodies, agaricoid, with, whitish, spores, typically, with, scaly, caps, ring, stipe, around, species. Lepiota is a genus of gilled mushrooms in the family Agaricaceae All Lepiota species are ground dwelling saprotrophs with a preference for rich calcareous soils Basidiocarps fruit bodies are agaricoid with whitish spores typically with scaly caps and a ring on the stipe Around 400 species of Lepiota are currently recognized worldwide Many species are poisonous some lethally so LepiotaLepiota clypeolaria the type speciesScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom FungiDivision BasidiomycotaClass AgaricomycetesOrder AgaricalesFamily AgaricaceaeGenus Lepiota Pers Gray 1821 Type speciesLepiota clypeolaria Bull P Kumm SynonymsFusispora Fayod 1889 Lepidotus Clem 1902 Lepiotula Maire Locq ex E Horak 1968 Morobia E Horak 1979 Amogaster Castellano 1995 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 History 1 2 Current status 2 Description 3 Habitat and distribution 4 Toxicity 5 Literature 6 List of species 7 See also 8 ReferencesTaxonomy editHistory edit Agaricus section Lepiota was originally published in 1797 by South African born mycologist Christian Hendrik Persoon 1 It was subsequently raised to the rank of genus by Samuel Frederick Gray As originally conceived the genus was a mix of agarics with rings on their stems including species now placed in Armillaria Cortinarius and Pholiota 2 In 1822 however the influential Swedish mycologist Elias Magnus Fries restricted Lepiota to white spored ringed agarics 3 Based on macro and micromorphology later authors gradually refined the generic concept of Lepiota Some unrelated genera such as Cystoderma Fayod 1889 and Limacella Earle 1909 were removed from the genus whilst several related genera including Leucocoprinus Patouillard 1888 Macrolepiota and Leucoagaricus Singer 1948 Cystolepiota Singer 1952 and Echinoderma Bon 1991 were separated off These segregated genera together with Lepiota itself are still often grouped together as Lepiota s l sensu lato in the wide sense or as the lepiotoid fungi 4 5 6 7 The secotioid species Amogaster viridiglebus described in 1996 and initially placed in the order Boletales 8 was later determined to be a member of Lepiota and officially transferred to the genus in 2013 9 Current status edit Following some discussion over the type species 10 Lepiota has now been conserved under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants typified by Agaricus colubrinus Pers Lepiota clypeolaria 11 Recent molecular research based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences suggests that the morphological concept of Lepiota s s sensu stricto in the strict or narrow sense is soundly based 5 12 13 The name Lepiota is derived from the Greek lepis scale oὖs ear 14 Description editFruit bodies of Lepiota species are almost all agaricoid Lepiota viridigleba is the sole sequestrate species in the genus 9 most but not all having comparatively small caps less than 10 cm 4 in in diameter and slender stems The cap cuticle surface skin typically splits as the cap expands breaking up into concentric rings of scales towards the margin The gills beneath the cap are white to cream rarely yellow and are free not joined to the stem The gills are covered by a partial veil when young which typically ruptures to leave a cuff like ring sometimes ephemeral often with additional scaly remains on the stem Several species have a distinct often rubbery smell The spore print is white to cream The spores are usually but not always dextrinoid turning red brown in an iodine based reagent 4 15 Habitat and distribution editMost if not all Lepiota species are nitrophilic with a preference for calcareous soils They typically occur in rich humus in broadleaf or conifer woodland in northern Europe often among nettles Urtica dioica or dog s mercury Mercurialis perennis A few species are more frequently found in calcareous grassland or in dunes 15 The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution but with a preference for warm areas meaning there are fewer species in colder climates Around 400 species are currently recognized worldwide 16 Toxicity editSeveral species contain amatoxins and are lethally poisonous if consumed 17 Those known to have caused fatalities include Lepiota brunneoincarnata 18 19 L brunneolilacea 20 L castanea 21 L helveola 21 22 and L subincarnata synonym L josserandii 23 No Lepiota species is recommended as edible 15 Literature editNo comprehensive monograph of the genus has yet been published In Europe however species of Lepiota were illustrated and described in a regional guide by Candusso amp Lanzoni 1990 4 and more briefly in descriptive keys by Bon 1993 15 Dutch species were illustrated and described by Vellinga 2001 24 No equivalent modern guides have been published for North America but Vellinga 2008 has published an online bibliography of the relevant literature 25 In Australia a guide to the Lepiota species of south eastern Queensland was published by Aberdeen 1992 6 In Asia a study of Lepiota diversity in northern Thailand revealed 73 species 26 nbsp Lepiota subincarnata nbsp Lepiota magnispora nbsp Lepiota castanea nbsp Lepiota cristata nbsp Lepiota castaneidisca nbsp Lepiota lilaceaList of species editSee also List of Lepiota species The following species have individual entries Lepiota ananya Lepiota anupama Lepiota babruka Lepiota babruzalka Lepiota bengalensis Lepiota brunneoincarnata Lepiota castanea Lepiota clypeolaria Lepiota harithaka Lepiota helveola Lepiota ignivolvata Lepiota nirupama Lepiota shveta Lepiota spheniscispora Lepiota subincarnata synonym L josserandii Lepiota zalkavritha Lepiota locanianisis extinct The following species have individual entries but are now placed in different genera Lepiota aspera Echinoderma asperum Lepiota lutea Leucocoprinus birnbaumii Lepiota molybdites Chlorophyllum molybdites Lepiota naucina Leucoagaricus leucothites Lepiota procera Macrolepiota procera Lepiota rhacodes Chlorophyllum rhacodesSee also editList of Agaricaceae genera List of Agaricales generaReferences edit Persoon CH 1797 Tentamen dispositionis methodicae Fungorum in Latin Leipzig Germany Wolf p 68 Gray SF 1821 A natural arrangement of British plants Vol 1 London Baldwin Cradock and Joy p 601 Retrieved 2011 08 05 Fries EM 1821 Systema Mycologicum Vol 1 Lund Sweden Ex Officina Berlingiana p 19 Retrieved 2011 08 05 a b c Candusso M Lanzoni G 1990 Fungi Europaei 4 Lepiota s l Alassio Italy Edizioni Candusso p 743 a b Johnson J Vilgalys R 1998 Phylogenetic systematics of Lepiota sensu lato based on nuclear large subunit rDNA evidence Mycologia 90 6 971 979 doi 10 2307 3761269 JSTOR 3761269 a b Aberdeen EC 2001 Lepiotoid genera Agaricales in south eastern Queensland Gailes Queensland Aberdeen Publications p 34 ISBN 978 0 9596526 4 2 Bon M 1991 Les genres Echinoderma Locq ex Bon st nov et Rugosomyces Raithelhuber ss lato Documents Mycologiques in French 21 82 61 66 Castellano MA 1995 NATS truffle and truffle like fungi 4 Amogaster viridigleba gen et sp nov a new truffle like fungus from the Sierra Nevada Mycotaxon 55 185 8 a b Ge Z W Smith ME 2013 Phylogenetic analysis of rDNA sequences indicates that the sequestrate Amogaster viridiglebus is derived from within the agaricoid genus Lepiota Agaricaceae Mycological Progress 12 1 151 5 doi 10 1007 s11557 012 0841 y S2CID 18543761 Donk MA 1962 The generic names proposed for Agaricaceae Beihefte zur Nova Hedwigia 5 1 320 ISSN 0078 2238 International Code of Botanical Nomenclature Vienna Code 2006 Appendix III INTERNATIONAL CODE OF BOTANICAL NOMENCLATURE online Archived from the original on 2012 10 06 Retrieved 2011 02 20 Vellinga EC 2003 Phylogeny of Lepiota Agaricaceae Evidence from nrITS and nrLSU sequences Mycological Progress 2 4 305 322 doi 10 1007 s11557 006 0068 x S2CID 13944947 Vellinga EC 2004 Genera in the family Agaricaceae Evidence from nrITS and nrLSU sequences Mycological Research 108 Pt 4 354 377 doi 10 1017 S0953756204009700 PMID 15209277 S2CID 42847042 Rea C 1922 British Basidiomycetaceae a handbook of the larger British fungi Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 799 a b c d Bon M 1993 Flore mycologique d Europe 3 Les Lepiotes Amiens Cedex CRDP de Picardie p 153 Kirk PM Cannon PF Minter DW Stalpers JA 2008 Dictionary of the Fungi 10th ed Wallingford UK CABI ISBN 978 0 85199 826 8 Benjamin DR 1995 Mushrooms poisons and panaceas A handbook for naturalists mycologists and physicians New York W H Freeman amp Co p 422 ISBN 978 0 7167 2649 4 Puig Hernandez A Chumillas Cordoba C Camprodon Calveras J De Francisco Enciso E Furio Marco MP Ferran Martinez G 2002 Intoxicacion fatal por Lepiota bruneoincarnata Anales de Medicina Interna 18 9 481 2 doi 10 4321 s0212 71992001000900007 PMID 11715136 Ben Khelil M et al 2010 Intoxication mortelle par Lepiota brunneoincarnata a propos de 4 cas Annales de Biologie Clinique 68 5 561 567 doi 10 1684 abc 2010 0467 PMID 20870578 Boiffard J 1987 Une intoxication familiale par Lepiota brunneolilacea Documents Mycologiques 69 21 23 a b Paydas S et al 1990 Poisoning due to amatoxin containing Lepiota species British Journal of Clinical Practice 44 11 450 453 PMID 2282295 Isiloglu M Watling R 1991 Poisonings by Lepiota helveola Bres in southern Turkey Edinburgh Journal of Botany 48 91 100 doi 10 1017 S0960428600003668 Haines JH Lichstein E Glickerman D 1986 A fatal poisoning from an amatoxin containing Lepiota Mycopathologia 93 1 15 7 doi 10 1007 BF00437009 PMID 3960099 S2CID 28756785 Vellinga EC 2001 GenusLepiotain Flora Agaricina Neerlandica 5 Lisse Netherlands AA Balkema pp 109 151 ISBN 978 90 5410 494 0 Vellinga EC 2008 Bibliography of North American Lepiota species v 2 1 http nature berkeley edu brunslab ev americanlepiotaliterature 2 1 pdf Sysouphanthonga P Hyde KD Vellinga EC 2013 Diversity of Lepiota Agaricales in northern Thailand Mycology 4 1 22 28 doi 10 1080 21501203 2013 764358 S2CID 82743099 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lepiota amp oldid 1181871036, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.