Superregnum: Eukaryota
Regnum: Fungi
Subregnum: Dikarya
Divisio: Basidiomycota
Subdivisio: Agaricomycotina
Classis: Agaricomycetes
Subclassis: Agaricomycetidae
Ordo: Agaricales
Subordo: Agaricineae
Familia: Agaricaceae
Genus: Podaxis
Species: P. africana – P. algericus – P. anomalus – P. arabicus – P. argentinus – P. axatus – P. beringamensis – P. calyptratus – P. carcinomalis – P. chevalieri – P. deciduus – P. deflersii – P. dilabentis – P. egyptiacus – P. elatus – P. emerici – P. farlowii – P. fastigatus – P. ferrandii – P. ghattasensis – P. glaziovii – P. gollanii – P. indicus – P. loandensis – P. longii – P. macrosporus – P. mexicanus – P. microporus – P. mossamedensis – P. muelleri – P. paolii – P. patagonicus – P. perraldieri – P. pistillaris – P. rugospora – P. saharianus – P. schweinfurthii – P. senegalensis – P. squamosus – P. strobilaceus – P. subterraneus
Name
Podaxis Desv., 1809
Type Species: Podaxis senegalensis Desv., 1809
Synonyms
Catachyon (Ehrenb. ex Fr.) Fr., Syst. mycol., Index alphab. (Lundae): 68 (1832)
Cauloglossum Grev. ex Fr., Syst. mycol. (Lundae) 3(1): 60 (1829)
Chainoderma Massee, in Cooke, Grevillea 19(no. 90): 46 (1890)
Herculea Fr., (1823)
Podaxis [unranked] Catachyon Ehrenb. ex Fr., Syst. mycol. (Lundae) 3(1): 62 (1829)
Schweinitzia Grev., Edinb. Phil. J. 8: 258 (1823)
References
Primary references
Desvaux, N.A. 1809. Observations sur quelques genres à établir dans la famille des champignons. Journal de Botanique (Desvaux). 2:88-105
Links
Index Fungorum: IF 19269
MycoBank: MB 19269
Podaxis is a genus of secotioid fungi in the family Agaricaceae. Species, which have the appearance of a "stalked-puffball", have a worldwide distribution, and tend to be found growing solitary or scattered on sandy soils, especially in arid regions. Although close to 50 species have been described, it has been argued that many of them may represent extremes in the natural range of variations found in Podaxis pistillaris.[1]
Description
Fruiting bodies have the appearance of an unopened Coprinus comatus, with a stipe and a loose, brown to blackish powdery gleba at maturity. Basidiospores are obovate, thick-walled with a large apical pore, and typically 10-17 x 9-12 μm in size.[2] Clamp connections are present.[3]
Podaxis is a common inhabitant of soil and termite mounds throughout the drier regions of the tropics and subtropics of the world.[4] P. pistillaris is a ground-inhabiting species, but most Podaxis species in the rest of the world are associated with termite mounds. This includes the Australian species P. beringamensis.[5]
Taxonomy
The genus was originally named Podaxis and circumscribed by Nicaise Auguste Desvaux in 1809,[6] while Elias Magnus Fries later (1829) called the taxon Podaxon.[7] Although a number of articles have used the latter name, Podaxis is the preferred name as it has nomenclatorial priority due to its earlier publication.[1]
Early suggestions[1][2][8] that Podaxis was related to the genus Coprinus were later confirmed using phylogenetic analysis based on sequence data of rDNA genes.[9][10] This research showed that Podaxis is in a clade with the species Montagnea arenaria and Agaricus pocillator, and the genus Leucocoprinus. For this reason, Podaxis was transferred to the family Agaricaceae (order Agaricales) from the now obsolete family name Podaxaceae (order Podaxales).
A section of Podaxis, named Parvispora, was circumscribed to accommodate three species (P. argentinus, P. longii and P. microsporus) with small spores.[11]
Species
As of January 2016, Index Fungorum accepts 28 species in Podaxis:[12]
Podaxis africana De Villiers, Eicker & Van der Westh. 1989 – Africa[13]
Podaxis algericus Pat. 1904
Podaxis anomalus Lloyd 1920
Podaxis argentinus Speg. 1898
Podaxis axatus (Bosc) Massee 1890
Podaxis beringamensis Priest & M.Lenz 1999 – Australia[5]
Podaxis carcinomalis (L.f.) Fr. 1829 – Ghana
Podaxis chevalieri Pat. & Har. 1900[14]
Podaxis deciduus Bat. 1951
Podaxis dilabentis Bat. 1951
Podaxis emerici (Berk.) Massee 1890
Podaxis farlowii Massee 1890
Podaxis fastigatus Bat. 1951
Podaxis ferrandi Mattir. 1913
Podaxis ghattasensis Henn. 1898
Podaxis glaziovii Henn. 1897
Podaxis gollanii Henn. 1901
Podaxis longii McKnight 1985[11]
Podaxis macrosporus Speg. 1906
Podaxis microporus McKnight 1985[11]
Podaxis muelleri Henn. 1904
Podaxis patagonicus Speg. 1898
Podaxis pistillaris (L.) Fr. 1829
Podaxis rugospora De Villiers, Eicker & Van der Westh. 1989[13]
Podaxis saharianus G.Moreno & Mornand 1997[15]
Podaxis senegalensis Desv. 1809
Podaxis strobilaceus Copel. 1904
Podaxis subterraneus S.Ahmad 1941
Uses
The dark purple spores of Podaxis species are used by Australian aborigines as a face paint.[16] Podaxis aegyptiacus is used as a common traditional medicine in the Bamako region of Mali for wound-healing, and water extracts from the mushroom have been shown to have carbohydrates with beneficial effects on the immune system in vitro.[17]
See also
List of Agaricaceae genera
List of Agaricales genera
References
Morse EE. (1933). "A study of the genus Podaxis". Mycologia. 25 (1): 1–33. doi:10.2307/3754126. JSTOR 3754126.
Miller, Hope H.; Miller, Orson K. (1988). Gasteromycetes: Morphological and Developmental Features, with Keys to the Orders, Families, and Genera. Eureka, California: Mad River Press. ISBN 978-0-916422-74-5.
Johnson J. (1999). "Phylogenetic relationships within Lepiota sensu lato based on morphological and molecular data". Mycologia. 91 (3): 443–458. doi:10.2307/3761345. JSTOR 3761345.
"Podaxis beringamensis (Termite powderpuff) - JCU". Archived from the original on 27 July 2008. Retrieved 25 November 2008.
Priest MJ, Lenz M (1999). "The genus Podaxis (Gasteromycetes) in Australia with a description of a new species from termite mounds". Australian Systematic Botany. 12 (1): 109–116. doi:10.1071/SB95043.
Desvaux NA. (1809). "Observations sur quelques genres a etablir dans la famille des champignons. Podaxis senegalensis". Journal de Botanique (in French). 2: 95–97.
Fries EM. (1829). Systema Mycologicum (in Latin). Vol. 3. Lund, Sweden: Ex Officina Berlingiana. p. 62.
Watling R. (1978). "From infancy to adolescence: advances in the study of higher fungi". Transactions of the Botanical Society of Edinburg. 42 (supplement): 61–73. doi:10.1080/03746607808685324.
Hopple JS Jr; Vilgalys R. (1994). "Phylogenetic relationships among coprinoid taxa and allies based on data from restriction site mapping of nuclear rDNA". Mycologia. 86 (1): 96–107. doi:10.2307/3760723. JSTOR 3760723.
Hopple JS, Vilgalys R (1999). "Phylogenetic relationships in the mushroom genus Coprinus and dark-spored allies based on sequence data from the nuclear gene coding for the large ribosomal subunit RNA: divergent domains, outgroups, and monophyly". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 13 (1): 1–19. doi:10.1006/mpev.1999.0634. PMID 10508535. S2CID 15157909.
McKnight KH. (1985). "The small-spored species of Podaxis". Mycologia. 77 (1): 24–35. doi:10.2307/3793245. JSTOR 3793245.
Kirk PM. "Species Fungorum (version 26th August 2015). In: Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life". Archived from the original on 26 September 2017. Retrieved 9 January 2016.
De Villiers JJ, Eicker A, Van der Westhuizen GC (1989). "A new section and two new species of Podaxis (Gasteromycetes) from South Africa". South African Journal of Botany. 55 (2): 159–164. doi:10.1016/s0254-6299(16)31201-7.
Patouillard NT, Hariot P (1900). "Énumération des champignons récoltés par M.A. Chevalier au Sénégal et dans le Soudan occidental". Journal de Botanique (Morot) (in French). 14: 234–246.
Moreno G, Mornand J (1997). "Podaxis saharianus sp. nov. (Podaxales, Gasteromycetes), espèce nouvelle du Maroc". Cryptogamie, Mycologie (in French). 18 (3): 247–254.
Cleland JB, Johnston TH (1933). "The ecology of the aborigines of Central Australia; botanical notes". Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of South Australia. 57: 113–124.
Diallo D, Sogn C, Samake FB, Paulsen BS, Michaelsen TE, Keita A (2002). "Wound healing plants in Mali, the Bamako region. An ethnobotanical survey and complement fixation of water extracts from selected plants". Pharmaceutical Biology. 40 (2): 117–128. doi:10.1076/phbi.40.2.117.5846.
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