taxonID	type	description	language	source
F335766A4135384A3473E4343A98A45E.taxon	etymology	Etymology. Rhamnoides (Lat.) refers to the species growing on Hippophae rhamnoides. Basidiomata perennial, pileate, solitary or a few imbricated, hard corky and without odour or taste when fresh, woody hard and medium in weight when dry; pilei dimidiate to ungulate, triquetrous in section, projecting up to 5 cm, 7 cm wide and 2.5 cm thick at base; pileal surface yellowish-brown, greyish-brown to dark brown, concentrically sulcate, at first velutinate, becoming glabrous and slightly cracked with age; margin obtuse. Poroid surface clay-buff to yellowish-brown when fresh, becoming orange brown to snuff brown when dry, shining; sterile margin yellowish-brown, up to 3 mm wide; pores circular, 11 - 13 per mm, dissepiments entire. Context yellowish-brown, zonate, woody hard, up to 1.5 cm thick; tubes greyish-brown, paler than context, hard corky to brittle, up to 1 cm long, annual layers indistinct.	en	Liu, Tie-Zhi, Chen, Qian, Han, Mei-Ling, Wu, Fang (2018): Fomitiporiarhamnoides sp. nov. (Hymenochaetales, Basidiomycota), a new polypore growing on Hippophae from China. MycoKeys 36: 35-43, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.36.25986, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.36.25986
