dcsimg

Comprehensive Description

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Fomes roseus (Alb. & Schw.) Cooke, Grevillea 14 : 21. 1885
Boletus roseus Alb. & Schw. Consp. Fung. 251. 1805.
Polyporus roseus Fries, Syst. Myc. 1 : 372. 1821.
Polyporus carneus Nees, Nova Acta Acad. I,eop. -Carol. 13 ; pi. 3. 1827.
Polyporus rufo-pallidus Trog, Flora 15 : 556. 1832.
Fomitopsis rosea Karst. Rev. Myc. 3^ : 18. 1881.
Fomes carneus Cooke, Grevillea 14 ; 21. 1885.
Pileus woody, dimidiate, varying from conchate to ungTilate, often imbricate and longitudinally effused, 2-A X 6-8X0.5-3 cm.; surface rugose, subfasciate, slightly sulcate, rosy or flesh-colored, becoming gray or black with age ; margin acute, becoming obtuse, sterile, pallid, often undulate : context floccose-fibrose to corky, rose-colored, 0.2-2 cm. thick ; tubes indistinctly stratose, 1-2 mm. long each season, mouths circular, 3-4 to a mm., edges obtuse, concolorous: spores ellipsoid, smooth, thickwalled, subhyaline,
3.5X6^.
Type locality : Germany.
Habitat : Dead trunks ; especially those of coniferous trees. Distribution : North America ; also in Europe.
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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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North American Flora

Fomitopsis rosea

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Fomitopsis rosea is a pink polypore found in Western North America[1] and in Europe. This is a close relative of another pink conk, the Rosy Conk (F. cajanderi). While F. cajanderi is a plant pathogen, F. rosea is a detritivore.[1]

Habitat

F. rosea grows in Western North America, most often in spruce forests.[1] Specimens from Vancouver Island, Prince George, and Wells Gray Park have helped characterize the species.[1] This conk grows exclusively on dead wood, with a preference for Picea, Pseudotsuga, or Populus logs.[1] It causes a brown cubical rot.[1]

Identification

F. rosea is a perennial fungus.[1] It is sessile, meaning it sticks out from the wood it grows on.[1] It often grows in a hoof or fan shape, with a smooth surface.[1] The top of the conk can be a pale pink fading to a grey or brown colour, while the bottom is a pale pink.[1] The inside of the conk, known as the context, is fibrous and woody, and may have layers of brown or pink colour.[1] It has round pores, with 3-5 pores per millimeter.[1]

F. rosea is thicker than its close relative, F. cajanderi.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ginns, J. H. (James Herbert). Polypores of British Columbia (Fungi: Basidiomycota). Victoria, BC. ISBN 978-0-7726-7053-3. OCLC 982126526.
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Fomitopsis rosea: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Fomitopsis rosea is a pink polypore found in Western North America and in Europe. This is a close relative of another pink conk, the Rosy Conk (F. cajanderi). While F. cajanderi is a plant pathogen, F. rosea is a detritivore.

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