Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873

Scientific name record
Names_Fungi record source
Is NZ relevant
This is a synonym
This record has collections
This record has descriptions

Click to collapse Details Info

Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel in Berkeley, Grevillea 1 165 (1873)

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

Berk. & Ravenel
Berk. & Ravenel
1873
165
ICN
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
species
Hymenochaete corticolor
Type USA

Click to collapse Classification Info

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873

FAGACEAE. Nothofagus fusca: Otago, Routeburn Valley, 450 m.
Hymenophore subpileate when umbonate-sessile, or resupinate, probably perennial, woody coriaceous, loosely attached, forming irregularly orbicular colonies 2-10 mm diameter, or merging to form linear areas 2-3 x 1-2.5 cm; pilei reduced to thickened upper edges of specimens growing vertically, naked, black, longitudinally striate, 1-1.5 mm thick; hymenial surface pallid ferruginous, or cinnamon, not creviced, even; margin usually abrupt, sometimes thinning out, crenate, concolorous, free. Context ferruginous, black next the substratum, 0.3-1 mm thick, of mainly erect hyphae embedding scattered setae and numerous large crystals; skeletal hyphae 3-4 µm diameter, walls to 1 µm thick, golden brown; generative hyphae 2.5-3 µm diameter, walls 0.2 µm thick, hyaline. Setal layer occupying the entire fructification, of numerous overlapping rows of setae sometimes arranged in irregular strata; setae subulate, some projecting to 60 µm, 65-95 x 9-12 µm, walls naked or encrusted, ferruginous, lumena narrow. Hymenial layer to 35 p deep, a close palisade of basidia and paraphyses. Basidia subclavate, 14-22 x 3.5-4 µm, bearing 2-4 spores; sterigmata slightly arcuate, slender, to 6 µm long. Paraphyses cylindrical, 8-15 x 2.5-3 µm. Spores suballantoid, 5-6.5 x 2-2.5 µm, walls smooth, hyaline, 0.1 µm thick.
DISTRIBUTION: North America, West Indies, New Zealand.
HABITAT: Living trunks associated with a pocket rot.
The collection listed agrees with authentic specimens examined in Kew herbarium as to macrofeatures and size, the shape and distribution of setae, and size and shape of spores. It differs in that specimens were collected on dead wood of an axe blaze on a living trunk, whereas North American plants grow upon bark of living trunks.
The species is difficult to place within a key; for fructifications, although often resupinate, are not uncommonly umbonate-sessile with the upper margin (of those growing on upright trunks) thickened into a black glabrous pileus. The context is composed of erect hyphae embedding setae arranged in overlapping rows, sometimes in strata; and, as setae are present throughout the fructification a context, present in most pileate species, is wanting. The plant therefore belongs to Section III, and has been treated as a stratose species with rudimentary pilei. Scattered through the context are numerous coarse crystals, or cavities in which they once were present. Projecting setae are usually encrusted with crystals, and sometimes enmeshed in hyphal sheaths.
TYPE LOCALITY: South Carolina, U.S.A.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel (1873)
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel (1873)
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel (1873)
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel (1873)
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel (1873)
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873

Click to collapse Collections Info

Hymenochaete corticolor Berk. & Ravenel 1873
[Not available]

Click to collapse Notes Info

typification
Type USA

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb18dda-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
16 April 2002
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top