genus gastroboletus
A mycologist carefully examines a genus Gastroboletus specimen in the forest.
Noun: A taxonomic genus of fungi classified within the family Secotiaceae. Fungi in this genus resemble boletes (fleshy mushrooms with pores instead of gills) but are distinguished by the characteristic that their spores are not forcibly discharged from the basidium (the spore-bearing cell).
The term is used in scientific contexts, specifically in mycology (the study of fungi), taxonomy, and biology, to refer to this particular group of fungi. - The mycologist identified the specimen as belonging to genus Gastroboletus. - A key feature separating genus Gastroboletus from true boletes is its spore dispersal mechanism.
- The genus name is always capitalized and italicized in formal scientific writing: Gastroboletus.
- It can be used in a broader taxonomic hierarchy: "The order Boletales contains the family Secotiaceae, which includes Gastroboletus."
- Gasteromycete (n): A historical, informal grouping for fungi with enclosed spore-bearing structures, which includes the family Secotiaceae and genera like .
- Secotiaceae (n): The family to which this genus belongs.
- Bolete (n): A common name for mushrooms in the family Boletaceae, which species resemble superficially.
- There are no common-language synonyms for this precise scientific taxonomic name.
- Gasteroid fungi: A descriptive term for fungi with internally produced, non-forcibly discharged spores, encompassing the form found in .
A mycologist carefully examines a genus Gastroboletus specimen in the forest.
- a genus of fungi belonging to the family Secotiaceae; they resemble boletes but the spores are not discharged from the basidium