About: Dermocybe is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 75 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1047 citations. The topic is also known as: Cortinarius subg. Dermocybe.
TL;DR: Molecular data support the morphological groupings of the taxa of Dermocybe and Cortinarius, although they more closely correspond to biochemical analyses.
Abstract: The genus Cortinarius Fr. (Cortinariaceae, Agaricales) is divided into four or more subgenera. Dermocybe (Fr.) Sacc. has been recognized as either a subgenus of Cortinarius or a separate genus, distinguished in part by the presence of various anthraquinonic pigments. Nucleotide sequences of ribosomal DNA 5.8S and internal transcribed spacers were used to investigate the phylogenetic relationships among species of Dermocybe and selected taxa from subgenera of Cortinarius. Sequence data from 47 herbarium specimens representing 31 taxa (28 species plus 3 varieties) of Dermocybe and Cortinarius were analyzed using parsimony, maximum likelihood, and neighbor joining. In general, molecular data support the morphological groupings of the taxa, although they more closely correspond to biochemical (anthraquinone and other) analyses. Phylogenetic trees showed that, while the sections Dermocybe and Malicoriae are monophyletic, and the concolorous or almost concolorous red species (section Sanguineae, such as D. sang...
TL;DR: In this study, ethyl acetate and aqueous fractions from 117 collections of Australian macrofungi belonging to the mushroom genus Cortinarius were screened for antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and overall, the lipophilic fractions were more active than the aQueous fractions.
TL;DR: It is suggested that classification concepts based mainly on macromorphological characters are likely to lead to artificial grouping, whereas certain microscopical and chemical characters seem to be useful in constructing a more natural classification system for Cortinarius.
TL;DR: The ITS region is confirmed as an effective barcode for Cortinarius and a standard pairwise distance threshold of 2.0% is proposed to DNA barcode Australian Cortinius taxa.