2017
DOI: 10.1007/s11557-017-1312-2
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New Cantharellus species from the Republic of Korea

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Cited by 10 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Because of the whitish hymenophore when young and the sometimes deep orange-yellow to cinnamon buff pileus surface, this species may be somewhat reminiscent of C. albovenosus . The latter species, however, has always a much brighter orange pileus and a more veined hymenophore that remains white, even with age, and it belongs in subgenus Cinnabarini (see Antonín et al 2017 ). It is interesting to note that both Japanese and Korean specimens were collected near Pinus densiflora among possible host trees.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Because of the whitish hymenophore when young and the sometimes deep orange-yellow to cinnamon buff pileus surface, this species may be somewhat reminiscent of C. albovenosus . The latter species, however, has always a much brighter orange pileus and a more veined hymenophore that remains white, even with age, and it belongs in subgenus Cinnabarini (see Antonín et al 2017 ). It is interesting to note that both Japanese and Korean specimens were collected near Pinus densiflora among possible host trees.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and for one collection of C. albovenosus Buyck, Antonín & V. Hofst. We introduced these newly produced tef -1 sequences in the alignment obtained by Antonín et al (2017) . Species of subgenus Pseudocantharellus Eyssart.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Because of the whitish hymenophore when young and the sometimes deep orange-yellow to cinnamon buff pileus surface, this species may be somewhat reminiscent of C. albovenosus. The latter species, however, has always a much brighter orange pileus and a more veined hymenophore that remains white, even with age, and it belongs in subgenus Cinnabarini (see Antonín et al 2017). It is interesting to note that both Japanese and Korean specimens were collected near Pinus densiflora among possible host trees.…”
Section: Cantharellus Anzutakementioning
confidence: 99%
“…At present, while updates on Cantharellus taxonomy have progressed relatively quickly in western Europe and North America, that in Asia remains very fragmented. However, recent studies have reported several new chanterelles from China (Shao et al, 2011;Tian et al, 2012;Shao et al, 2014Shao et al, , 2016aAn et al, 2017;Jian et al, 2020), Japan (Suhara and Kurogi, 2015;Ogawa et al, 2018), Korea (Antonin et al, 2017;Buyck et al, 2020), Malaysia (Eyssartier et al, 2009;Buyck et al, 2014), India (Das et al, 2015;Buyck et al, 2018), and Iran (Parad et al, 2018). Recently, a large-scale survey of wild edible mushrooms in local markets in Yunnan province, southwestern China, revealed that there was at least one cryptic species within this group of species in this region (Zhang et al, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%