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Before You Take A Bite Of That Mushroom, Consider This

This grocery store packet of porcini mushrooms contained a surprise: three species of fungi never before named or described.
Bryn Dentinger/Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew
This grocery store packet of porcini mushrooms contained a surprise: three species of fungi never before named or described.

If you haven't been DNA-sequencing your dinner lately, you've been missing out. In particular, we suggest examining those spongy, wild fungi before you lay them on your pizza.

Bryn Dentinger and Laura Suz, mycologists with the Royal Botanic Gardens in Surrey, England, were curious about what was in their marketplace shrooms. So they bought a packet of dried Chinese porcini and took it to the lab.

They picked out 15 pieces and compared sequences of the DNA to a database of known species, creating a phylogenetic tree of Chinese boletes (those are mushrooms with pores rather than gills on the undersides of their caps.) What they uncovered, described in PeerJ, were three new species, identified in previous fungi lineages but never before named or described.

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They took the opportunity to name them themselves – the graphically accurate but unpalatable-sounding Boletus bainiugan ("white beef liver"), Boletus meiweiniuganjun ("delicious cattle liver fungus"), and Boletus shiyong ("edible").

"There's probably lots of different species of porcini," Rytas Vilgalys, a mycologist at Duke University who was not involved in the new study, tells The Salt. He says that even with his local mushroom club they regularly identify novel species from the wild.

Consumers need not worry about the different species in the bag. "Porcini mushrooms are considered choice and edible," says Vilgalys, "They're not likely to be mistaken for a poisonous species." (No porcini are known to be poisonous.) He says the technology for sequencing has made it much faster and much cheaper to find these things out.

In the past, mushrooms have been hard to classify because they can be cryptic species, in that they look identical but are genetically different. In particular, the porcini group contains a wide-range of kinds, though Dentinger and Suz note all fungi species are incredibly diverse and under-documented.

As they say in their paper, "We hope that by naming these taxa and providing reference sequences for comparison, we will encourage mycologists with ready access to fresh collections of these species to record and document their characteristics and discover new features that may help to distinguish them."

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So if you've got a couple extra thousand dollars lying around, you too can buy a DNA sequencer and join the hunt to document new species. Or just finish that pizza.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.