| Cantharellus subg. Cinnabarinus | |
|---|---|
![]() | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Kingdom: | Fungi |
| Division: | Basidiomycota |
| Class: | Agaricomycetes |
| Order: | Cantharellales |
| Family: | Cantharellaceae |
| Genus: | Cantharellus |
| Subgenus: | Cantharellus subg. Cinnabarinus Buyck & V. Hofst. 2013 |
| Type species | |
| Cantharellus cinnabarinus (Schwein.) Schwein. 1832 | |
| Species | |
|
See Text | |
| Gills on hymenium | |
| Cap is convex | |
| Edibility is edible | |
Cinnabarinus is a subgenus of fungi in the genus Cantharellus.
Description
This subgenus has mainly small species with orange, pink or red tint. They have thin-walled hyphal ends at the cap surface.[1]
Taxonomy
The subgenus was established in 2013 based on phylogenetic analysis with Cantharellus cinnabarinus designated as the type species,
Species
Accepted species:
| Image | Scientific Name | Year | Mycorrhizal association | Distribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C. afrocibarius Buyck & Hofsetter | 2012 | Tanzania, Congo | ||
| C. albovenosus Buyck, Antonín & Ryoo, in Antonín, Hofstetter, Ryoo, Ka and Buyck | 2017 | Castanea crenata, Larix kaempferi | China (Jiangsu), South Korea | |
| C. atrolilacinus Eyssart., Buyck & Halling | 2003 | Quercus corrugata | Costa Rica | |
| C. chrysanthus Ming Zhang, C.Q. Wang & T.H. Li | 2022 | China (Guangdong, Guizhou) | ||
![]() | C. cinnabarinus (Schwein.) Schwein. red chantrelle | 1832 | hardwood | eastern North America |
![]() | C. citrinus Buyck, R. Ryoo & Antonín | 2020 | China(Guizhou), South Korea | |
![]() | C. coccolobae Buyck, P.A. Moreau & Courtec., | 2016 | Coccoloba | the Caribbean, the Bahamas, and Florida |
![]() | C. concinnus Berk. | 1878 | Casuarina, Eucalyptus | the Australian chanterelle |
| C. conspicuus Eyssartier, Buyck & Verbeken | 2002 | Brachystegia spiciformis, Lonchocarpus sericeus, Pterocarpus santalinoides | Zimbabwe, Congo | |
| C. corallinus Buyck & V. Hofsetter | 2016 | United States (Missouri) | ||
| C. cyanoxanthus R. Heim ex Heinem. | 1958 | Congo | ||
| C. cyphelloides Suhara & S. Kurogi | 2015 | Japan | ||
| C. decolorans Eyssart. & Buyck. | 1999 | Madagascar | ||
| C. diminutivus Corner | 1970 | Malaysia | ||
![]() | C. friesii Quél. the orange chanterelle | 1872 | Asia and Europe | |
| C. garnieri Ducousso & Evssart | 2004 | Acacia, Nothofagus | New Caledonia | |
| C. longisporus Heinem. | 1958 | Sub-Saharian Africa, Madagascar | ||
| C. phloginus S.C. Shao & P.G. Liu, in Shao, Buyck, Tian, Liu and Geng | 2016 | Pinus and Castanopsis | China (Yunnan) | |
| C. sinocinnabarinus Ming Zhang, S.C. Shao & T.H. Li sp. | 2022 | Quercus delavayi, Pinus yunnanensis | China (Yunnan) | |
| C. subcyanoxanthus Buyck | 2012 | Madagascar | ||
![]() | C. texensis Buyck & V. Hofstetter | 2011 | southeastern United States | |
| C. variabilicolor Buyck, Randrianj. & V. Hofst. | 2015 | Madagascar | ||
References
- ↑ Buyck, Bart; Kauff, Frank; Eyssartier, Guillaume; Couloux, André; Hofstetter, Valérie (2014). "A multilocus phylogeny for worldwide Cantharellus (Cantharellales, Agaricomycetidae)". Fungal Diversity. 64 (1): 101–121. doi:10.1007/s13225-013-0272-3. ISSN 1560-2745.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.

_Schwein_645336.jpg.webp)
.jpg.webp)



