Welcome to dextri.com on July 6 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Piptoporus betulinus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Birch Bracket

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Phylum: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Polyporales
Family: Fomitopsidaceae
Genus: Piptoporus
Species: P. betulinus
Binomial name
Piptoporus betulinus
(Bull. ex Fr.) P. Karst.
Template:MycomorphboxHow to create a mycomorphbox
Mycological characteristics for
Piptoporus betulinus
 
pores on hymenium
 

no distinct cap

 

hymenium is decurrent

 

lacks a stipe

 

spore print is white

 

ecology is parasitic

 

edibility: inedible

Piptoporus betulinus, commonly known as the birch bracket or razor strop, is one of the most common polyporous bracket fungi and, as the name suggests, grows almost exclusively on birch trees. The brackets burst out from the bark of the tree, and these fruiting bodies can last for more than a year. Technically, it is an edible mushroom, with a strong, pleasant "mushroomy" odor but a bitter taste. It is said to have medicinal properties, and the velvety cut surface of the fruiting body were used as a strop for finishing the finest of edges on razors. Dried specimens have also been used as tinder, and this fungus was carried by "Ötzi the Iceman" – the 5,000 year old mummy found in Tyrol.[1]

It is a necrotrophic parasite on weakened birches, and will cause brown rot and eventually death, being one of the most common fungi visible on dead birches. It is likely that the birch bracket fungus becomes established in small wounds and broken branches and may lie dormant for years, compartmentalised into a small area by the tree's own defence mechanisms, until something occurs to weaken the tree. Fire, drought and suppression by other trees are common causes of such stress.

In most infections there is only one fungal individual present, but occasionally several individuals may be isolated from a single tree, and in these cases it is possible that the birch bracket fungus entered after something else killed the tree. These fungal "individuals" can sometimes be seen if a slice of brown-rotted birch wood is incubated in a plastic bag for several days. This allows the white mycelium of the fungus to grow out of the surface of the wood. If more than one individual dikaryon is present, lines of intraspecific antagonism form as the two individual mycelia interact and repel each other.

Contents

[edit] Description

The fruiting bodies (basidiocarps) are pale, with a smooth greyish-brown top surface, with the underside a creamy white and with hundreds of pores that contain the spores. The fruiting body has a rubbery texture, becoming corky with age. Wood decayed by the fungus, and cultures of its mycelium, often smell distinctly of green apples.

P. betulinus has a bipolar mating system where monokaryons or germinating spores can only mate and form a fertile dikaryon with an individual that possesses a different mating-type factor. There are at least 33 different mating-type factors within the British population of this fungus. These factors are all variants or alleles of a single gene, as opposed to the tetrapolar mating system of some other basidiomycete species, which involves two genes.

[edit] Distribution

The geographic distribution of Piptoporus betulinus appears to be restricted to the Northern Hemisphere. There is some doubt about the ability of isolates from the European continent, North America and the British Isles to interbreed.

Oils found in the fruit of the fungus are poisonous to the parasitic whipworm Trichuris trichura.

[edit] Medicinal properties

Piptoporus betulinus has anti-inflammatory compounds[2] [3] and anti-bacterial properties.[4]

[edit] See also

Medicinal mushrooms

[edit] References

  1. ^ Capasso L (December 1998). "5300 years ago, the Ice Man used natural laxatives and antibiotics". Lancet 352 (9143): 1864. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)79939-6. PMID 9851424. http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0140-6736(05)79939-6. 
  2. ^ Wangun HV, Berg A, Hertel W, Nkengfack AE, Hertweck C. (Nov 2004), "Anti-inflammatory and anti-hyaluronate lyase activities of lanostanoids from Piptoporus betulinus.", J Antibiot (Tokyo) (Germany) 57 (11): 755-8, PMID 15712671 
  3. ^ Kamo T, Asanoma M, Shibata H, Hirota M. (Aug 2003), "Anti-inflammatory lanostane-type triterpene acids from Piptoporus betulinus.", J Nat Prod. 66 (8): 1104-6, PMID 12932134 
  4. ^ Schlegel B, Luhmann U, Härtl A, Gräfe U. (Sep 2000), "Piptamine, a new antibiotic produced by Piptoporus betulinus Lu 9-1.", J Antibiot (Tokyo) 53 (9): 973-4, PMID 11099232 

[edit] External links

Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs