Extraction Source
Coriolus versicolor is also known as Coriolus versicolor, Versicolor versicolor, Coriolus versicolor, and Tile fungus. It belongs to the subphylum Basidiomycota, class Hypomycetes, order Nonpleomycetes (order Polypores), family Polyporaceae, and genus Trametes. The fruiting bodies are generally small, sessile, flat and rolled, or fan-shaped or shell-shaped. They are often edge-to-edge with each other and arranged in an imbricate shape. The cap is 1-8cm wide and 0.1-0.3cm thick. The leathery surface has slender villi and narrow concentric rings of various colors. The villi often have a silky luster, and the edges are thin and wavy. The flesh of the bacteria is white. The tube hole surface is white, light yellow, 3-5 per mm.
The fruiting body of Corylopsis tinctoria is annual. Leathery to semi-fibrous, lateral stemless, often imbricate-like, often connected to the left and right, and the fruiting bodies born on the cross section of the felling pile or on the fallen wood often form a rosette shape. The cap is semicircular to shell-shaped, (1-6) cm Gray, white, brown, blue, purple, black and other colors, forming a moiré-like concentric ring pattern; the lid edge is thin and sharp, wavy, complete, light color. The orifice surface of the tube is white at first, gradually changing to yellowish brown, auburn to light gray black; the orifice is round to polygonal, with 3-5 per 1mm, and later cracks, resulting in a single layer of bacterial tubes, white, 1-2mm long. The fungus flesh is white and fibrous, and when dried, the fibrous texture becomes almost leathery. The spores are cylindrical, slightly curved, smooth, and colorless.