Muscodor roseus

Muscodor roseus
Scientific classification
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M. roseus
Binomial name
Muscodor roseus
Worapong, Strobel & W.M.Hess (2002)

Muscodor roseus is an anamorphic fungus in the family Xylariaceae. It is an endophyte that colonizes the inner bark, sapwood and outer xylem of the plants Grevillea pteridifolia and Erythrophleum chlorostachys, found in the Northern Territory of Australia. It grows as a pinkish, felt-like mycelium on several media, and produces a mixture of volatile antibiotics. Cultures tend to have a musty odour. The specific epithet roseus means "pink".[1]

References

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  1. ^ Worapong J, Strobel G, Daisy B, Castillo UF, Baird G, Hess WM (2002). "Muscodor roseus anam. sp. nov., an endophyte from Grevillea pteridifolia". Mycotaxon. 81: 463–75.

Further reading

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