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Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894

Scientific name record
Names_Fungi record source
Is NZ relevant
This is the current name
This record has collections
This record has descriptions
This is indigenous
Threat status: Data deficient

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Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister, Monogr. Mycetozoa 157 (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894

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Indigenous, non-endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

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(Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister
Schumach.
Lister
1894
157
ICN
species
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum

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Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894

PDD 68826, 74380
Fruiting body a pseudoaethalium (occasionally sporangiate or aethaliate fruiting bodies are encountered) composed of numerous cylindrical sporangia, grey at first but becoming dull yellow to yellowish brown, sporangia densely compacted into a flat, palisade-like layer, the individual sporangia 0.3–0.5 mm in diameter and 1–3 mm tall, the total composite structure sometimes 10 cm or more in total extent. Hypothallus thick, often extending beyond the margin of the fruiting body, silvery or pallid. Peridium membranous, not persisting in mature fruiting bodies except at the apices of the individual sporangia (where it is thicker and forms a well-defined "cap") and in the junctions between adjacent sporangia (where it persists as threadlike strands), dehiscence occurring as a result of the breaking apart of the individual sporangial caps, each of which remains connected to the threadlike strands formed in the sporangial junctions. Pseudocapillitum consisting of these persistent remnants of the peridium. Spores olivaceous brown to yellow or clay-coloured in mass, nearly colourless to pale yellow by transmitted light, distinctly spiny (spines up to 1 um long), 8.5–11.0 µm in diameter. Plasmodium bright pink.
Reported to be cosmopolitan (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969) but apparently most common in temperate regions of the world and rare at high latitudes (Stephenson et al. 2000). First reported from New Zealand by Chessman & Lister (1915), based on a specimen from the Bay of Plenty. Also known from Auckland, South Canterbury, and Dunedin (Rawson 1937).
Decaying wood.
Martin & Alexopoulos (1969), Nannenga-Bremekamp (1991), Neubert et al. (1993), Stephenson & Stempen (1993), Lado & Pando (1997), Ing (1999).
Although quite variable in size and colour, this species is usually fairly easy to recognise because of the distinctive nature of the fruiting body.

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Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister (1894)

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Dictydiaethalium plumbeum (Schumach.) Rostaf. ex Lister 1894
[Not available]

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1cb1876c-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
18 August 1997
19 November 2001
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