MarketPolyporaceae
Company Profile

Polyporaceae

The Polyporaceae are a family of poroid fungi belonging to the Basidiomycota. The flesh of their fruit bodies varies from soft to very tough. Most members of this family have their hymenium in vertical pores on the underside of the caps, but some of them have gills or gill-like structures. Many species are brackets, but others have a definite stipe – for example, Polyporus badius.

Taxonomy
In his 1838 work Epicrisis Systematis Mycologici seu Synopsis Hymenomycetum, Elias Magnus Fries introduced the "Polyporei". Around the same time as Murrill, Curtis Gates Lloyd devoted considerable effort in sorting polypore taxonomy, and amassed a large and diverse collection of fruit bodies from around the world. In his 1953 monograph The Polyporaceae of the European U.S.S.R. and Caucasia, Apollinarii Semenovich Bondartsev included 54 genera in the Polyporaceae, which he further divided into five subfamilies and 10 tribes. Several works contributing to the systematics of the Polyporaceae were published in the following decades, including Marinus Anton Donk (1960, 1964), Gordon Heriot Cunningham (1965), and David Pegler (1973). ==Genera==
Genera
'' '' '' '' '' '' '' , Index Fungorum accepts 114 genera and 1621 species in the Polyporaceae: 1 species • Navisporus Ryvarden (1980); 6 species • Neodatronia B.K.Cui, Hai J.Li & Y.C.Dai (2014); 2 species • Neodictyopus Palacio, Robledo, Reck & Drechsler-Santos; 3 species • Neofavolus Sotome & T.Hatt. (2013); 4 species • Neofomitella Y.C.Dai, Hai J.Li & Vlasák (2015); 3 species • Nigrofomes Murrill (1904); 2 species • Pachykytospora Kotl. & Pouzar (1963); 3 species • Panus Fr. (1838); 40 species • Perenniporia Murrill (1942); 100 species • Perenniporiella Decock & Ryvarden (2003); 5 species • Perenniporiopsis C.L.Zhao (2017); 1 species • Phaeotrametes Lloyd ex J.E.Wright (1966); 1 species • Piloporia Niemelä (1982); 2 species • Podofomes Pouzar (1966); 3 species • Polyporus P.Micheli ex Adans. (1763); 279 species • Porogramme (Pat.) Pat. (1900); 7 species • Poronidulus Murrill (1904); 2 species • Pseudofavolus Pat. (1900); 6 species • Pseudopiptoporus Ryvarden (1980); 2 species • Pseudomegasporoporia 1 species • Pycnoporus P.Karst. (1881); 4 species • Pyrofomes Kotl. & Pouzar (1964); 7 species • Roseofavolus T.Hatt. (2003); 1 species • Royoporus A.B.De (1996); 2 species • Rubroporus Log.-Leite, Ryvarden & Groposo (2002); 2 species • Ryvardenia Rajchenb. (1994); 2 species • Sarcoporia P.Karst. (1894); 3 species • Skeletocutis Kotl. & Pouzar (1958); 43 species • Sparsitubus L.W.Hsu & J.D.Zhao (1980); 1 species • Spongipellis Pat. (1887); 9 species • Stiptophyllum Ryvarden (1973); 1 species • Thermophymatospora Udagawa, Awao & Abdullah (1986); 1 species • Tinctoporellus Ryvarden (1979); 4 species • Trametes Fr. (1836); 195 speciesTrametopsis Tomšovský (2008); 1 species • Tyromyces P.Karst. (1881); 119 species • Truncospora Pilát (1953); 10 species • Vanderbylia D.A.Reid (1973); 7 species • Wolfiporia Ryvarden & Gilb. (1984); 6 species • Xerotus Fr. (1828); 16 species • Yuchengia B.K.Cui & Steffen (2013); 1 species In a proposed family-level classification of the Polyporales based on molecular phylogenetics, Alfredo Justo and colleagues propose synonymizing the Ganodermataceae with the Polyporaceae, and accept 44 genera in this family: Abundisporus, Amauroderma, Cerarioporia, Colospora, Cryptoporus, Datronia, Datroniella, Dendrodontia, Dentocorticium, Dichomitus, Donkioporia, Earliella, Echinochaete, Epithele, Favolus, Fomes, Fomitella, Ganoderma, Grammothele, Grammothelopsis, Hexagonia, Haploporus, Hornodermoporus, Lentinus, Lignosus, Lopharia, Megasporia, Megasporoporia, Melanoderma, Microporellus, Microporus, Neodatronia, Neofavolus, Pachykytospora, Perenniporia, Perenniporiella, Pseudofavolus, Pyrofomes, Tinctoporellus, Tomophagus, Trametes, Truncospora, Vanderbylia, and Yuchengia. ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com