Corticium umbonatum G. Cunn. 1954
Details
Corticium umbonatum G. Cunn., Trans. Roy. Soc. New Zealand 82 298 (1954)
Nomenclature
G. Cunn.
G. Cunn.
1954
298
ICN
Corticium umbonatum G. Cunn. 1954
NZ holotype
species
Corticium umbonatum
Classification
Descriptions
Corticium umbonatum G. Cunn. 1954
Bambusa sp. Auckland: Mt. Eden, 350ft., March, 1950, G.H.C., type collection, P.D.D. herbarium, No. 10596. Rhipogonum scandens Forst. Auckland: Hick's Bay, 300ft., May, 1952, G.H.C.
Hymenophore annual, slightly adnate, membranous, effused. forming linear areas to 20 x 3 cm.; surface white, becoming pallid cream, even, not creviced; margin thinning out, white, arachnoid, adnate. Context white, 15-25 µ thick, composed of a basal layer of compact parallel hyphae and an intermediate layer of erect, densely compacted hyphae which collapse and become pseudoparenchymatous; generative hyphae 3-3.5 µ diameter, wall 0.2 µ thick, naked, hyaline, branched, septate, with clamp connections. Hymenial layer to 30 µ deep, of basidia and paraphyses. Basidia clavate, slightly projecting, 24-36 x 7-8 µ, 4-spored; sterigmata somewhat stout, to 6 µ long. Paraphyses subclavate, cylindrical, or as frequently obclavate, about half the size of the basidia. Spores usually depressed-globose or subglobose, 8-10 x 7-9 µ, umbonate, wall minutely closely verruculose, hyaline, 0.5 µ thick.
DISTRIBUTION. New Zealand.
HABITAT. Effused on bark of dead stems.
Hymenophorum membranaceum, leviter adnatum, effusum; superficie alba deinde pallide cremea, non rimosa. Hyphae contextus fibulatae, 3-3.5 µ diam., nudae. Basidia 24-36 x 7-8 µ, 4 sporis. Sporae depresso-globosae, umbonatae, 8-10 x 7-9 µ, subtiliter dense verruculosae, hyalinae.
Identified readily by the unusual spores, somewhat large basidia, tenuous context and white, non-creviced, membranous hymenophore. Spores are commonly depressed-globose and attached to the sterigmata by a definite umbo on the middle of one flattened side. At first they lie with long axes nearly parallel with that of the basidium; as they mature spores become oriented with the umbo downwards, and when detached bear this structure permanently. The hymenial layer soon collapses so that developing basidia may be seen only in sections taken from the growing periphery. The base of the plant tends to lift from the substratum when the ventral surface is seen to be polished and discoloured.
TYPE LOCALITY: Auckland: Mt. Eden, 350ft., March, 1950, G.H.C., type collection, P.D.D. herbarium, No. 10596.
Taxonomic concepts
Global name resources
Collections
Notes
typification
GRAMINEAE. Arundinaria macrosperma:New Zealand, Auckland, Mt. Eden, 120 m, type collection, PDD 10596
Metadata
1cb184ee-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
29 May 1996
15 December 2003