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・ Lactosylceramide 4-alpha-galactosyltransferase
・ Lactarius sanguifluus
・ Lactarius scoticus
・ Lactarius scrobiculatus
・ Lactarius semisanguifluus
・ Lactarius subbaliophaeus
・ Lactarius subdulcis
・ Lactarius subflammeus
・ Lactarius subserifluus
・ Lactarius subtorminosus
・ Lactarius subumbonatus
・ Lactarius subvelutinus
・ Lactarius tabidus
・ Lactarius tesquorum
・ Lactarius torminosulus
Lactarius torminosus
・ Lactarius turpis
・ Lactarius uvidus
・ Lactarius vietus
・ Lactarius villosus
・ Lactarius vinaceorufescens
・ Lactarius vitellinus
・ Lactase
・ Lactase persistence
・ Lactase-phlorizin hydrolase
・ Lactate
・ Lactate 2-monooxygenase
・ Lactate aldolase
・ Lactate dehydrogenase
・ Lactate dehydrogenase elevating virus


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Lactarius torminosus : ウィキペディア英語版
Lactarius torminosus

''Lactarius torminosus'', commonly known as the woolly milkcap or the bearded milkcap, is a large agaric fungus. A common and widely distributed species, it is found in North Africa, northern Asia, Europe, and North America. It was first described scientifically by Jacob Christian Schäffer in 1774 as an ''Agaricus'', and later transferred to the genus ''Lactarius'' in 1821 by Samuel Frederick Gray. A variety, ''L. torminosus'' var. ''nordmanensis'', is known from the United States, Canada, and Switzerland. ''L. torminosus'' officially became the type species of ''Lactarius'' in 2011 after molecular studies prompted the taxonomic reshuffling of species between several Russulaceae genera.
A mycorrhizal species, ''L. torminosus'' associates with various trees, most commonly birch, and its fruit bodies (mushrooms) grow on the ground singly or in groups in mixed forests. The caps of ''L. torminosus'' mushrooms are convex with a central depression, and attain a diameter of up to . A blend of pink and ochre hues, the cap sometimes has concentric zones of alternating lighter and darker shades. The edge of the cap is rolled inward, and shaggy when young. On the underside of the cap are narrow flesh-colored gills that are crowded closely together. The cylindrical stem is a pale flesh color with a delicately downy surface and brittle flesh; it is up to long and thick. When cut or injured, the fruit bodies ooze a bitter white latex that does not change color upon exposure to air. The variety ''nordmanensis'', in contrast, has latex that changes from white to yellow. ''Lactarius torminosus'' can be distinguished from similar species like ''L. pubescens'' or ''L. villosus'' by differences in morphology and coloration, or by microscopic characteristics like spore shape and size.
Although it is valued for its peppery flavor and eaten after suitable preparation in Russia and Finland, the species is highly irritating to the digestive system when eaten raw. The toxins, also responsible for the strongly bitter or acrid taste, are destroyed by cooking. Studies have identified several chemicals present in the mushrooms, including ergosterol and derivatives thereof, and the pungent-tasting velleral.
==Taxonomy and phylogeny==
German naturalist Jacob Christian Schäffer was the first to describe the species, placing it in ''Agaricus'' in 1774.〔 Seven years later in 1781, Jean Bulliard described a species he called ''Agaricus necator'' and illustrated it in the first volume of his ''Herbier de la France'';〔 this name and the synonym ''Lactarius necator'', resulting from Christian Hendrik Persoon's 1800 transfer〔 to ''Lactarius'', are both considered to refer to ''L. torminosus''.〔 Otto Kuntze, for his part chose to put it in ''Lactifluus'',〔 while Paul Kummer thought ''Galorrheus''〔 was the appropriate placement; until the recent resurrection of ''Lactifluus'', both genera had been long considered to be unnecessary segregates of ''Lactarius''.〔 According to Index Fungorum,〔 another synonym is Samuel Frederick Gray's〔 ''Lactarius necans''. Gray also gave the species its modern name when he transferred it to ''Lactarius'' in his 1821 ''Natural Arrangement of British Plants''.〔〔
The specific epithet ''torminosus'' means "tormenting" or "causing colic", in reference to the gastrointestinal distress associated with consuming the raw mushroom.〔 Early English vernacular names were Gray's "bellyach milk-stool" (1821),〔 and James Edward Smith's "bearded pepper agaric" (1824).〔 More recent common names include "shaggy milkcap",〔 "powderpuff milkcap",〔 "pink-fringed milkcap",〔 "bearded milkcap",〔 and the British Mycological Society-recommended "woolly milkcap".〔
According to Hesler and Smith's 1979 classification of the genus ''Lactarius'', ''L. torminosus'' belongs to subgenus ''Piperites'', section ''Piperites'' (in which it is the type species), subsection ''Piperites''. Species in this subsection are characterized by having latex that does not turn yellow after exposure to air, and/or that does not stain the cut surface of the mushroom surface yellow.〔Hesler and Smith (1979), (p. 237. )〕 A 2004 phylogenetic analysis of European ''Lactarius'' species concluded that ''L. torminosus'' falls into a group that includes ''L. torminosulus'', and that these two species are closely related to a group that includes ''L. tesquorum'', ''L. scoticus'', and ''L. pubescens''.〔
A multi-gene molecular analysis published in 2008 demonstrated that species then distributed in the genera ''Lactarius'' and ''Russula'' actually consisted of four distinct lineages.〔 The subsequent reorganization of Russulaceae species—a taxonomic change needed to make ''Russula'' and ''Lactarius'' monophyletic—required that a new type species be defined for ''Lactarius'', since the previous type, ''L. piperatus'', belonged to the clade that will be transferred to genus ''Lactifluus''. A proposal to conserve ''Lactarius'' with ''L. torminosus'' as the type was accepted by the Nomenclatural Committee for Fungi〔 and passed at the 2011 International Botanical Congress.〔 The change minimizes "taxonomic disruption", allowing most of the common and well-known ''Lactarius'' species to retain their names.〔

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