Species of fungus
Antrodia albida
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A plant affected by A. albida
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Scientific classification
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Domain:
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Eukaryota
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Kingdom:
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Fungi
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Division:
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Basidiomycota
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Class:
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Agaricomycetes
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Order:
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Polyporales
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Family:
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Fomitopsidaceae
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Genus:
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Antrodia
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Species:
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A. albida
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Binomial name
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Antrodia albida
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Synonyms[1]
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- Daedalea albida Fr. (1815)
- Polyporus serpens Fr. (1818)
- Daedalea serpens (Fr.) Fr. (1821)
- Daedalea albida Schwein. (1822)
- Lenzites albida (Fr.) Fr. (1838)
- Trametes albida (Fr.) Fr. (1840)
- Trametes albida Lév. (1847)
- Trametes sepium Berk. (1847)
- Polyporus stephensii Berk. & Broome (1848)
- Daedalea sepium (Berk.) Ravenel (1855)
- Cellularia albida (Fr.) Kuntze (1898)
- Trametes serpens subsp. albida (Fr.) Bourdot & Galzin (1925)
- Trametes serpens (Fr.) Fr. (1874)
- Antrodia serpens (Fr.) P.Karst. (1880)
- Physisporus serpens (Fr.) P.Karst. (1881)
- Coriolellus sepium (Berk.) Murrill (1905)
- Trametes subcervina Bres. (1925)
- Agaricus serpens (Fr.) E.H.L.Krause (1932)
- Polyporus sepium (Berk.) G.Cunn. (1948)
- Coriolellus albidus (Fr.) Bondartsev (1953)
- Coriolellus serpens (Fr.) Bondartsev (1953)
- Tyromyces sepium (Berk.) G.Cunn. (1965)
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Antrodia albida is a species of fungus in the genus Antrodia that grows on the dead wood of deciduous trees. A widely distributed species, it is found in Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, North America, and South America.[2] The fungus was first described under the name Daedalea albida by Elias Magnus Fries in his 1815 work Observationes mycologicae.[3] Marinus Anton Donk transferred it to Antrodia in 1960.[4]
References
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Antrodia albida | |
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Daedalea albida | |
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