dcsimg

Associations

provided by BioImages, the virtual fieldguide, UK
Foodplant / saprobe
fruitbody of Coriolopsis gallica is saprobic on dead wood of Quercus

In Great Britain and/or Ireland:
Foodplant / saprobe
fruitbody of Coriolopsis gallica is saprobic on dead, fallen branch of Fagus

Foodplant / saprobe
fruitbody of Coriolopsis gallica is saprobic on dead wood of Fraxinus

Foodplant / saprobe
fruitbody of Coriolopsis gallica is saprobic on dead wood of Broadleaved trees

Foodplant / saprobe
fruitbody of Coriolopsis gallica is saprobic on dead wood of Ulmus

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Characteristic features of coriolopsis gallica (pictures and text)

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Guidance for identification (German text)

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Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Funalia stuppea (Berk.) Murrill, Bull. Torrey Club 32 : 356. 1905
Trameies siuppeus Berk. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. 7 : 453. 1841.
Polyporus Lindheimeri Berk. & Curt. Grevillea 1 : 50. 1872. (Type from Texas.)
Trametes Peckii Kalchb. Bot. Gaz. 6 : 274. 1881. (Type from Dakota.)
Pileus corky to woody, variable in size, dimidiate, sessile, decurrent, imbricate, convex above, 2-6 X 5-12 X 0.5-3 cm.; surface ferruginous to fulvous, hirsute to villose, azonate, sulcata at times ; margin thin or rounded, concolorous, entire or slightly undulate : context isabelline, zonate, corky to woody, duplex in large specimens, being softer above, 0.3-1.5 cm. thick; tubes rather long, 3-12 mm., whitish-isabelline within, mouths rather variable in size, subcircular to angular, distorted with age, averaging about 1 mm. in diameter, edges thin, fimbriate to toothed, isabelline to fuscous : spores oblong or slightly curved, smooth, hyaline, 11-13 X 3.5-4 ,".
Type locality : Carlton House, British North America.
Habitat ; Dead poplar trunks.
Distribution : Temperate North America.
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bibliographic citation
William Alphonso MurrilI, Gertrude Simmons BurIingham, Leigh H Pennington, John Hendly Barnhart. 1907-1916. (AGARICALES); POLYPORACEAE-AGARICACEAE. North American flora. vol 9. New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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Coriolopsis gallica

provided by wikipedia EN

Coriolopsis gallica is a fungus found growing on decaying wood. It is not associated with any plant disease, therefore it is not considered pathogenic. For various Coriolopsis gallica strains isolated, it has been found, as a common feature of the division Basidiomycota, that they are able to degrade wood components, mainly lignin and to lesser extent cellulose, which results in a degradation area covered by the accumulating -white- cellulose powder. Therefore, C. gallica might generically be called, as with many other basidiomycetes, a "white-rot" fungus.[1]

This feature of preferential degradation of lignin components, such as melanoidins, polyphenols, and other aromatic compounds is of biotechnological interest in the industries of paper (recycling and bleaching), beer and sugar cane production and for the bioremediation of waste waters produced in these and other industrial activities.[2] While in Basidiomycota, the lignolytic activities are jointly played by enzymes such as laccases, manganese peroxidases and lignin peroxidases, in Coriolopsis gallica, as well as in the phylogenetically related Trametes spp., laccases (even in multiple genomic copies) are the main mechanisms involved in lignin modification.[2] In other well-studied white-rot basidiomycota, for example Phanerochaete spp., virtually no laccase activity is involved in lignin biodegradation. [3]

References

  1. ^ "[1]" white-rot fungus" image search in Google, retrieved on May 15, 2009
  2. ^ a b Upadhyay P, Shrivastava R, Agrawal PK (June 2016). "Bioprospecting and biotechnological applications of fungal laccase". 3 Biotech. 6 (1): Article 15. doi:10.1007/s13205-015-0316-3. PMC 4703590. PMID 28330085.
  3. ^ [2] Google Scholar search of "Coriolopsis gallica", retrieved on May 15, 2009
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Coriolopsis gallica: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Coriolopsis gallica is a fungus found growing on decaying wood. It is not associated with any plant disease, therefore it is not considered pathogenic. For various Coriolopsis gallica strains isolated, it has been found, as a common feature of the division Basidiomycota, that they are able to degrade wood components, mainly lignin and to lesser extent cellulose, which results in a degradation area covered by the accumulating -white- cellulose powder. Therefore, C. gallica might generically be called, as with many other basidiomycetes, a "white-rot" fungus.

This feature of preferential degradation of lignin components, such as melanoidins, polyphenols, and other aromatic compounds is of biotechnological interest in the industries of paper (recycling and bleaching), beer and sugar cane production and for the bioremediation of waste waters produced in these and other industrial activities. While in Basidiomycota, the lignolytic activities are jointly played by enzymes such as laccases, manganese peroxidases and lignin peroxidases, in Coriolopsis gallica, as well as in the phylogenetically related Trametes spp., laccases (even in multiple genomic copies) are the main mechanisms involved in lignin modification. In other well-studied white-rot basidiomycota, for example Phanerochaete spp., virtually no laccase activity is involved in lignin biodegradation.

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