2012
DOI: 10.3159/torrey-d-12-00019.1
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Studies on lentinoid fungi (LentinusandPanus) from the semi-arid region of Brazil1

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Cited by 16 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Panus alpacus morphologically also differs from another small (10–20 mm pileal diam) species, Panus parvus (Drechsler-Santos et al 2012) described from Brazil, in having a reddish brown pileus with shorter squamules (≤840 μm long) more scattered towards the disc rather than blackish, spiniform, longer squamules (to 1 mm long) on the pileus, more towards the margin (ciliate), and longer and slenderer stipe (14–25 × 1–1.5 vs 5–15 × 1–4 mm). In addition, P. parvus differs microscopically from P. alpacus in the larger gloeocystidia (40–75 × 8–17 vs 18–45 × 5–11 μm) and metuloids (30–80 × 9–13 vs 19–25 × 7–11.5 μm).…”
Section: Taxonomymentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Panus alpacus morphologically also differs from another small (10–20 mm pileal diam) species, Panus parvus (Drechsler-Santos et al 2012) described from Brazil, in having a reddish brown pileus with shorter squamules (≤840 μm long) more scattered towards the disc rather than blackish, spiniform, longer squamules (to 1 mm long) on the pileus, more towards the margin (ciliate), and longer and slenderer stipe (14–25 × 1–1.5 vs 5–15 × 1–4 mm). In addition, P. parvus differs microscopically from P. alpacus in the larger gloeocystidia (40–75 × 8–17 vs 18–45 × 5–11 μm) and metuloids (30–80 × 9–13 vs 19–25 × 7–11.5 μm).…”
Section: Taxonomymentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Note: Panus sribuabanensis was similar to P. bambusinus , P. caespiticola , and P. tephroleucus based on the color of the pileus. However, the longer size of the cylindrical basidiospores (6.0–8.0 × 3.0–5.5 μm) and the shorter size of basidia (18.0–20.0 × 5.0–6.0 μm) in P. tephroleucus differ from P. sribuabanensis [ 19 , 22 , 50 ]. Notably, the presence of the smaller basidiospores in P. sribuabanensis clearly distinguishes it from P. caespiticola (5.0–7.5 × 4.0–5.5 μm) [ 19 , 50 ].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…from Tonglo in Sikkim. Now this species exists as the synonym of Panus neostrigosus Drechsler-Santos et al (2012). Therefore it is excluded from the list.…”
Section: Image 2 Lentinus Cladopusmentioning
confidence: 99%