Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Cunningham, G.H. 1955: Thelephoraceae of New Zealand. Part V. The genus Asterostroma. Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand 83(2): 241-245.

Reference record
Names_Fungi record source
Is NZ relevant
This record has descriptions
Show more

Click to collapse Details Info

Cunningham, G.H. 1955: Thelephoraceae of New Zealand. Part V. The genus Asterostroma. Transactions of the Royal Society of New Zealand 83(2): 241-245.
Article

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Agathis australis Salisb. Auckland. Manaia, Whangarei Heads, 500 ft, October, 1947, J.M. Dingley. Beilschmiedia tawa (A. Cunn.) Hook. f. & Benth. Auckland. Waiotapu, 1,800ft, June, 1950, J.M. Dingley. Te Whaiti, 1,500ft, June, 1951, J.M. Dingley. Orere, Hunua Range, March, 1953, J.M. Dingley. Cordyline australis (Forst. f.) Hook. f. Auckland, Manaia, Whangarei Heads, 500ft, October, 1947, J.M. Dingley. Knightia excelsa R.Br. Auckland. Waipoua Kauri Forest, December, 1951, M.E. Lancaster. Melicytus ramiflorus Forst. Auckland. Purewa Bush, April, 1953, D.W. McKenzie. Nothofagus fusca (Hook. f.) Oerst. Wellington. Day's Bay, February, 1927, D. W. McKenzie. Nothopanax arboreum (Forst. f.) Seem. Auckland. Anawhata Road, Waitakeres, 1,000ft, November, 1948, J.M. Dingley. Kauri Glen, Northcote, August.. 1951, J.M. Dingley. Suttonia salicina Hook. f. Auckland. Cutty Grass Road, Waitakeres, 900ft, August, 1947, J.M. Dingley. Weinmannia racemosa L.f. Otago. Ulva Islet, Stewart Island, February, 1954, J.M. Dingley. Unknown hosts. Auckland. Rotorua, W.N. Cheesman, 1914, type collection, in Kew herbarium. Hunua Range, 1,000ft, May, 1949, J.M. Dingley.
Hymenophore annual, often reviving a second season, sometimes vaguely stratose, membranous, loosely attached, effused forming irregular areas to 10 x 6 cm; surface clay colour, tan, bay-brown or ochre, according to age and hymenial development, even, sometimes pruinose, at length scantily creviced; margin thinning out, clay colour or tan, fibrillose, loosely attached, rhizomorphs rare, when present pallid tan. Context tan or ferruginous, 250-900 µ thick, composed of a thin base of parallel hyphae, an intermediate layer of scanty woven hyphae and masses of stellate setae which are progressively smaller and lighter in colour from base to surface, sometimes obscurely stratose; generative hyphae 2.5-3.5 µ diameter, wall 0.2 µ thick, hyaline, brandied, septate. Hymenial layer 60-130 µ deep, of basidia, paraphyses, gloeocystidia and asterophyses arranged in a loose palisade. Basidia cylindrical, a few subclavate, projecting, 24-32 x 5-6 µ, 4-spored; sterigmata slender, to 6 µ long. Paraphyses subclavate, about half the length of and narrower than the basidia. Gloeocystidia confined to the hymenial layer, projecting to 30 µ, or not, fusiform or subclavate with bluntly acuminate apices, 80-110 x 10-14 µ, wall naked, 0.5-1 µ thick, hyaline. Asterophyses forming the bulk of the hymenial layer, sometimes arranged in several vague zones, composed of subclavate bodies bearing 4-7 short aculeate rays which are sometimes once or twice bifid, attached to long and narrow pedicels often freely geniculated, and sometimes bearing two or three asterophyses in chains. Stellate setae chestnut-brown, 25-150 µ diameter, composed of 3-7 commonly 4-5 aculeate rays each 15-80 µ long, attached radiately to a slightly inflated boss, sometimes bifid. Spores globose or subglobose, appearing angular, 7-10 µ diameter (including spines), wall hyaline, 0-5 µ thick, coarsely echinulate-verrucose, spines acuminate, to 3 µ long.
TYPE LOCALITY. Rotorua, New Zealand.
DISTRIBUTION. New Zealand, Australia, Malaya?
HABITAT. Effused on decayed bark or decorticated wood.
Separated readily from other species, save A. medium Bres., by the coarsely verrucose-echinulate spores. Spines of these are large, with broad bases and acuminate apices, and give to spores an angular appearance though they are globose or subglobose. Although the spores resemble those of A. medium, our species differs in the presence of abundant asterophyses, larger gloeocystidia and much thicker often stratose context.
Surface colour varies appreciably. When sterile plants are darker since many of the coloured stellate setae project; when fertile they assume a lighter colour and often appear pruinose owing to the projecting gloeocystidia. The hymenial layer may be pulled off readily since it is feebly attached by the scanty generative hyphae.
A collection of A. persimile from Australia is in Kew herbarium, donated by the late C.G. Lloyd; and it is possible that it occurs also in Malaya since a drawing by Corner (Trans. Brit. Myc. Soc., 31, 242, 1948) could well be of this species.

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb0ffea-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
reference
Names_Fungi
6 April 2001
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top