Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q10471548> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 58 of
58
with 100 triples per page.
- Q10471548 subject Q6259276.
- Q10471548 subject Q7792382.
- Q10471548 subject Q8475531.
- Q10471548 subject Q8475711.
- Q10471548 abstract "Dicranophora fulva is a mold of the family Mucoraceae. The species was described as new to science in 1886 by German mycologist Joseph Schröter, who first discovered it near Baden in 1877. Its species name is derived from the Latin fulvus "brown". The yellow mold has been reported from Europe and the United States. Although it is wide-ranging, it is not common. It grows exclusively on the decaying fruit bodies of boletales. Known hosts include Suillus bovinus, S. cavipes, S. grevillei, Paxillus involutus, Chroogomphus rutilus, and Leccinum scabrum. It was not recorded after 1935 until Hermann Voglmayr and Irmgard Krisei-Greilhuber encountered it on a fungal field trip in southeastern Styria in 1994. Initially unable to identify it, they solved the mystery after checking older literature.Dicranophora fulva was illustrated by botanist Charles Geoffrey Dobbs in 1938. The mold produces two types of sporangia: one type is tree-like in shape, with mostly single-spored sporangiola; the other type has a morphology more typical of the Mucorales. Zygospores produced by the fungus have irregular surface crevices. It appears to require high humidity and ample moisture, cool temperatures and abundant bolete mushrooms to flourish, a set of conditions more likely to occur in montane regions, which might explain the lack of records for this species. The mold becomes dormant in the autumn, but the circumstances that induce it to germinate are unknown.It is unclear whether Dicranophora fulva is a mycoparasite (living off living material) or saprotrophite (living off dead or decaying material). It was initially thought to be the former, as are many Mucorales. However it is readily cultivated on a wide variety of substrates such as bread and is hence suspected of being saprotrophic.".
- Q10471548 binomialAuthority Q71160.
- Q10471548 class Q215384.
- Q10471548 division Q215384.
- Q10471548 family Q3268436.
- Q10471548 genus Q10471547.
- Q10471548 kingdom Q764.
- Q10471548 order Q141280.
- Q10471548 synonym "*Thamnidium fulvum (J.Schröt.) Milko (1968)".
- Q10471548 thumbnail Suillus_bovinus_317261.jpg?width=300.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q10471547.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q1165762.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q1361864.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q141280.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q1491620.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q159341.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q1624061.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q183252.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q1938070.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q215384.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q221673.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q281801.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q3268436.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q3821040.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q397.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q41358.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q4832012.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q518069.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q6259276.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q628977.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q659629.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q6877935.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q71160.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q764.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q7792382.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q833108.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q8475531.
- Q10471548 wikiPageWikiLink Q8475711.
- Q10471548 binomialAuthority Q71160.
- Q10471548 classis Q215384.
- Q10471548 divisio Q215384.
- Q10471548 familia Q3268436.
- Q10471548 genus "Dicranophora".
- Q10471548 ordo Q141280.
- Q10471548 regnum Q764.
- Q10471548 synonyms "*Thamnidium fulvum ( Milko )".
- Q10471548 type Eukaryote.
- Q10471548 type Fungus.
- Q10471548 type Species.
- Q10471548 type Thing.
- Q10471548 type Q19088.
- Q10471548 comment "Dicranophora fulva is a mold of the family Mucoraceae. The species was described as new to science in 1886 by German mycologist Joseph Schröter, who first discovered it near Baden in 1877. Its species name is derived from the Latin fulvus "brown". The yellow mold has been reported from Europe and the United States. Although it is wide-ranging, it is not common. It grows exclusively on the decaying fruit bodies of boletales. Known hosts include Suillus bovinus, S. cavipes, S.".
- Q10471548 label "Dicranophora fulva".
- Q10471548 depiction Suillus_bovinus_317261.jpg.