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Volvariella bombycina

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Volvariella bombycina
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Pluteaceae
Genus: Volvariella
Species:
V. bombycina
Binomial name
Volvariella bombycina
(Schaeff.) Singer (1951)
Synonyms[1]
  • Agaricus bombycinus Schaeff. (1774)
  • Agaricus denudatus Batsch (1783)
  • Amanita calyptrata Lam. (1783)
  • Pluteus bombycinus (Schaeff.) Fr. (1836)
  • Volvaria bombycina (Schaeff.) P.Kumm. (1871)
  • Volvariopsis bombycina (Schaeff.) Murrill (1911)
Volvariella bombycina
View the Mycomorphbox template that generates the following list
Gills on hymenium
Cap is conical or umbonate
Hymenium is free
Stipe has a volva
Spore print is pink to salmon
Ecology is saprotrophic
Edibility is edible or choice

Volvariella bombycina, commonly known as the silky volvariella,[2] silky sheath, silky rosegill, silver-silk straw mushroom, or tree mushroom, is a species of edible mushroom in the family Pluteaceae. It is an uncommon but widespread species, having been reported from Asia, Australia, the Caribbean, Europe, and North America. The fruit body (mushroom) begins developing in a thin, egg-like sac. This ruptures and the stem expands quickly, leaving the sac at the base of the stem as a volva. The cap, which can attain a diameter of up to 20 centimetres (8 inches), is white to slightly yellowish and covered with silky hairs. On the underside of the cap are closely spaced gills, free from attachment to the stem, and initially white before turning pink as the spores mature. The mushroom grows singly or in clusters, often appearing in old knotholes and wounds in elms and maples. V. bombycina contains compounds with antibacterial properties.

Description

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The mushroom has a deep, yellowish to dingy brown sac-like volva that covers the base of the stem.
A bisected young fruit body – still enveloped by the universal veil – reveals internal structures.

The fruit bodies of Volvariella bombycina are initially egg-shaped when still enclosed in the universal veil. As they expand, the caps later becoming bell-shaped or convex, and finally nearly flattened in age, attaining a diameter of 5–20 centimetres (2–8 inches). The dry cap surface is covered with silky threads. Its color is white to yellowish, becoming more pale approaching the margin. The flesh is thin, soft, and white,[3] and has an odor resembling raw potatoes.[4] The gills are crowded close together, free from attachment to the stem, and initially white before turning pinkish as the spores mature. The stem measures 6–20 cm (2+12–8 in) long by 1–3 cm (121+14 in) thick, and is typically tapered upward or thickened below. It is white, with a smooth surface, and is often slightly curved. The universal veil is membranous, often areolate (cracked into irregularly shaped blocks) or scaly, and forms a long, saclike volva that wraps around the base of the stem. It is white to yellowish or dingy brown, and often divided into lobes.[3]

The variety flaviceps has a yellow cap.

The variety V. bombycina var. flaviceps is distinguished from the main form by its smaller, bright yellow caps, up to 3.5 cm (1+12 in) in diameter, and its dirty-white, scaly volva. Murrill also noted that it developed a "peculiar sickening odor during drying".[5] V. bombycina var. microspora has smaller spores (6–7.5 by 4–5 μm), a yellow cap, and a blotched brown volva.[6] V. bombycina var. palmicola also has a yellow cap and small spores (5.9–7.5 by 4.3–5.4 μm), but can be distinguished from the previous varieties by its distantly spaced gills.[7]

Mushrooms produce a spore print with a color ranging from pinkish to salmon. Spores are elliptical, smooth, and measure 6.5–10 by 4.5–6.5 μm.[3] The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are club-shaped, four-spored, and measure 19–43 by 6–11 μm. Pleurocystidia (cystidia that occur on the gill face) are usually spindle shaped, but have a widely variable morphology; they are abundant in the hymenium, and have dimensions of 26–122 by 8–57 μm. The cheilocystidia (on the gill edge) are similar in morphology and abundance, some may feature knobs held at the end of slender projections up to 20 μm long; dimensions are in the range of 26 and 144 μm long by 8–46 μm wide. Clamp connections are absent from the hyphae of V. bombycina.[8]

The fruit bodies can be readily grown in laboratory culture.[9]

Bioactive compounds

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Several bioactive secondary metabolites have been isolated and identified from Volvariella bombycina fruit bodies, mycelium, or pure culture. The compounds ergosta-4,6,8(14),22-tetraene-3-one, ergosterol peroxide, indole-3-carboxaldehyde, and indazole were found in liquid culture.[10] In 2009, the novel compound isodeoxyhelicobasidin was identified from culture broth; this compound inhibits the enzyme human elastase.[11] The fungus also produces compounds that have antioxidative activity.[12]

Similar species

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The combination of a silky white cap, white stem, pink gills, pink spore print, and growth on wood is characteristic of this species and make identification of Volvariella bombycina in the field relatively easy. Some Pluteus species have a general similar appearance, and also produce pinkish to pinkish-brown spore prints, but they lack a volva. Amanita species grow on the ground and make white spore prints. V. pusilla has a small cap measuring 0.5–3 cm (141+14 in) in diameter with silky fibers and short lines visible at the cap edge when moist; it grows in soil in gardens and greenhouses and on lawns. V. hypopithys has a medium-size white cap that is 2–5 cm (34–2 in) in diameter with silky to scaly fibers and lacks the short lines at the cap edge when moist; it grows on the ground in woods.[13] V. caesiotincta has a bluish-gray cap, while V. gloiocephala can be distinguished from V. bombycina by its smooth cap that is sticky when damp, and a white volva.[4]

Taxonomy

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The species was first described in 1774 by German naturalist Jacob Christian Schäffer as Agaricus bombycinus. Throughout its taxonomical history, it has been shuffled to several genera, including Pluteus (by Elias Fries in 1836),[14] Volvaria (Paul Kummer, 1871),[15] and Volvariopsis (William Alphonso Murrill, 1911).[16][1] Rolf Singer placed it in its current genus, Volvariella, in 1951.[17] Other names that have been applied to the species include Jean-Baptiste Lamarck's Amanita calyptrata[18] and August Johann Georg Karl Batsch's Agaricus denudatus[19] (both published in 1783), but these are illegitimate names as Schäffer's earlier 1774 name has priority.[1]

In 1949, Murrill described the variety flaviceps from collections made growing on magnolia wood in Gainesville, Florida. Although he originally described it as a new species, Volvaria flaviceps,[5] Robert Shaffer considered it a variety of V. bombycina.[8] Variety microspora was first described in 1953, was later (1961) named by Richard William George Dennis;[6] variety palmicola was originally described as a distinct species Volvaria palmicola by Belgian mycologist Maurice Beely in 1928,[20] and later as a variety of V. bombycina by the same author in 1937.[7]

The root for the generic name Volvariella (as well as Volvaria and Volvariopsis, genera in which the species had been formerly placed) derives from the Latin volva, meaning "wrapper" or "a covering".[8] The specific epithet bombycina derives from the Latin root bombyc, or "silky".[3] Common names for the mushroom include the "silky sheath",[21] the "silky rosegill", the "silver-silk straw mushroom", or the "tree mushroom".[13]

Distribution and habitat

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Fruit bodies often grow in knotholes or clefts of trees; shown here on sugar maple.

Volvariella bombycina is a saprobic species.[22] Fruit bodies grow singly or in small groups on trunks and decayed stumps of dead hardwoods. Favored species include sugar maple, red maple, silver maple, magnolia, mango, beech, oak, and elm.[8] It is often found in clefts and knotholes of dead or living tree trunks.[4] It has been noted to fruit in the same location for several years.[23] Despite its preference for hardwoods, it has been reported growing on rare instances on coniferous wood.[24][25] An uncommon species with a wide distribution, it has been reported from Asia (Iran,[26] China,[27] India,[28] Korea,[29] and Pakistan),[citation needed] the Caribbean (Cuba),[30] Australia, Europe, North America,[23] and South America.[31] It acquired protected status in Hungary in 2005, making it a legal offense to pick it.[32] Variety microspora is known from Venezuela,[6] while V. bombycina var. palmicola occurs in the DR Congo.[7]

Uses

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The fruit bodies are edible, and usually considered of good quality. They have been called "excellent",[33] "tasty" with a "modest and pleasant flavor",[34] and "worth eating if found in large enough quantities".[23]

In culture

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Alexander H. Smith related a story of how unique circumstances led to the development of a local superstition about the species:

... the members of a family here in Ann Arbor were poisoned, some fatally, as the result of eating caps of a species of Amanita. The next year Volvaria bombycina fruited on a maple tree at the home of these people, and the story was circulated that some of the spores of the poisonous fungus, which caused the deaths the year before, had escaped from the house, lodged in the tree, germinated, grew and were now producing fruiting bodies. Consequently the carpophores of the Volvaria were held in great awe by the neighbors, and soon came to be referred to as the "ghost mushroom". No one, of course, would consider eating them.[35]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Volvariella bombycina (Schaeff.) Singer 1951". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2012-10-14.
  2. ^ Arora, David (1986). Mushrooms demystified: a comprehensive guide to the fleshy fungi (Second ed.). Berkeley: Ten Speed Press. ISBN 978-0-89815-169-5.
  3. ^ a b c d Arora D. (1986). Mushrooms Demystified: A Comprehensive Guide to the Fleshy Fungi. Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press. pp. 261–2, 903. ISBN 0-89815-169-4.
  4. ^ a b c Roberts P, Evans S (2011). The Book of Fungi. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. p. 320. ISBN 978-0226721170.
  5. ^ a b Murrill WA (1949). "Three new fleshy fungi". Mycologia. 41 (4): 490–1. doi:10.2307/3755241. JSTOR 3755241.
  6. ^ a b c Dennis RWG (1961). "Fungi venezuelani: IV, Agaricales". Kew Bulletin. 15 (1): 67–156 (see pp. 108–9). doi:10.2307/4115784. JSTOR 4115784.
  7. ^ a b c Shaffer RL (1962). "Synonyms, new combinations, and new species in Volvariella (Agaricales)". Mycologia. 54 (5): 563–72. doi:10.2307/3756325. JSTOR 3756325.
  8. ^ a b c d Shaffer RL (1957). "Volvariella in North America". Mycologia. 49 (4): 545–79. doi:10.2307/3756159. JSTOR 3756159.
  9. ^ Flegler SL (1981). "A method for production of Volvariella bombycina fruit bodies in culture". Mycologia. 73 (5): 992–3. doi:10.2307/3759809. JSTOR 3759809.
  10. ^ Xu GH, Choo SJ, Kim YH, Ryoo IJ, Seok SJ, Ahn JS, Yoo ID (2010). "Secondary metabolites of Volvariella bombycina and their inhibitory effects on melanogenesis" (PDF). Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology. 20 (1): 78–81. doi:10.4014/jmb.0906.06017. PMID 20134236.
  11. ^ Xu GH, Kim YH, Choo SJ, Ryoo IJ, Zheng CJ, Seok SJ, Kim WG, Yoo ID (2009). "Isodeoxyhelicobasidin, a novel human neutrophil elastase inhibitor from the culture broth of Volvariella bombycina". The Journal of Antibiotics. 62 (6): 333–4. doi:10.1038/ja.2009.24. PMID 19329988.
  12. ^ Badalyan SM (2003). "Edible and medicinal higher Basidiomycetes mushrooms as a source of natural antioxidants". International Journal of Medicinal Mushrooms. 5 (2): 153–62. doi:10.1615/InterJMedicMush.v5.i2.40.
  13. ^ a b Sundberg W, Bessette A (1987). Mushrooms: A Quick Reference Guide to Mushrooms of North America (Macmillan Field Guides). New York, New York: Collier Books. p. 66. ISBN 0-02-063690-3.
  14. ^ Fries EM (1836). Anteckningar öfver de i Sverige växande ätliga svampar (in Swedish). Uppsala, Sweden: Palmblad, Sebell. p. 34.
  15. ^ Kummer P. (1871). Der Führer in die Pilzkunde (in German). Zerbst, Germany: C. Luppe. p. 99.
  16. ^ Murrill WA (1911). "The Agaricaceae of tropical North America IV". Mycologia. 3 (6): 271–82. doi:10.2307/3753496. JSTOR 3753496.
  17. ^ Singer R. (1951). "The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy". Lilloa. 22 (2nd ed.): 401.
  18. ^ Lamarck JBAP (1783). Encyclopédie Méthodique, Botanique (in French). Vol. 1–1. Paris, France: Panckoucke. p. 105.
  19. ^ Batsch AJGK (1783). Elenchus fungorum (in Latin and German). Halle an der Saale, Germany: Apud Joannem J. Gebauer. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2012-10-16.
  20. ^ Beeli M. (1928). "Contribution a l'étude de la flore mycologique du Congo. VI Fungi Goossensiani. Agaricacées rhodosporées". Bulletin de la Société Royale de Botanique de Belgique (in French). 61 (1): 78–103.
  21. ^ McKnight VB, McKnight KH (1987). A Field Guide to Mushrooms: North America. Peterson Field Guides. Boston, Massachusetts: Houghton Mifflin. pp. 252–3. ISBN 0-395-91090-0.
  22. ^ Kuo M. (November 2004). "Volvariella bombycina". MushroomExpert.com. Retrieved 2012-10-16.
  23. ^ a b c Dickinson C, Lucas J (1982). VNR Color Dictionary of Mushrooms. New York, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. pp. 158–9. ISBN 978-0442219987.
  24. ^ de Vries GA. (1999). "[Volvariella bombycina is recorded growing on the root of a living Picea abies, a host not previously reported in the Netherlands]". Coolia (in Dutch). 42 (1): 41–2. ISSN 0929-7839.
  25. ^ Gams W. (2002). "Volvariella bombycina nog eens bij een conifeer" [Volvariella bombycina found again on a conifer]. Coolia: Contactblad van de Nederlandse Mycologische Vereniging (in Dutch). 45 (1): 25. ISSN 0929-7839.
  26. ^ Asef M.R. (2020). Field guide of Mushrooms of Iran. Tehran: Iranshenasi publishing. p. 360. ISBN 9786008351429.
  27. ^ Zhishu B, Zheng G, Taihui L (1993). The Macrofungus Flora of China's Guangdong Province (Chinese University Press). New York, New York: Columbia University Press. p. 350. ISBN 962-201-556-5.
  28. ^ Mishra R. (2003). "Some wild edible mushrooms of Siang valley: Arunachal Pradesh". Plant Archives. 3 (1): 81–4. ISSN 0972-5210.
  29. ^ Seok S-J, Kim Y-S, Weon H-Y, Lee K-H, Park K-M, Min K-H, Yoo K-H (2002). "Taxonomic study on Volvariella in Korea". Mycobiology. 30 (4): 183–92. doi:10.4489/myco.2002.30.4.183. ISSN 1229-8093. S2CID 85743987.
  30. ^ Pegler DN (1988). "A revision of the Agaricales of Cuba 3. Keys to families, genera and species". Kew Bulletin. 43 (1): 53–75. doi:10.2307/4118036. JSTOR 4118036.
  31. ^ Menolli N, Capelari M (2008). "Records and two new species of Volvariella (Pluteaceae, Agaricales) from Brazil". Mycotaxon. 106: 385–98.
  32. ^ Siller I, DIma B, Albert L, Vasas G, Fodor L, Pal-Fam F, Bratek Z, Zagyva I (2006). "Vedett nagygombafajok Magyarorszagon" [Protected macrofungi in Hungary]. Mikologiai Kozlemenyek (in Hungarian and English). 45 (1/2): 3–158. ISSN 0133-9095.
  33. ^ Jordan M. (2004). The Encyclopedia of Fungi of Britain and Europe. London, UK: Frances Lincoln. p. 204. ISBN 0-7112-2378-5.
  34. ^ Bessette A, Fischer DH (1992). Edible Wild Mushrooms of North America: A Field-to-Kitchen Guide. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. p. 87. ISBN 0-292-72080-7.
  35. ^ Smith AH (1945). "Volvaria bombycina". Mycologia. 37 (4): 440–3. doi:10.2307/3754630. JSTOR 3754630.
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