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Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]

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

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Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]

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Berk.
Berk.
1859
1860
269
ICN
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Tas., Australia
species
Trichia verrucosa

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verrucosa

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Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]

PDD 37148, 39298, 72335
Fruiting body a stalked (or very rarely sessile) sporangium, several clustered on a united stalk, gregarious to scattered, up to 4 mm tall. Sporotheca pyriform or obovoid, bright yellow to ochraceous, up to 0.8 mm in diameter. Stalk thick, rugose, ofen flattened or procumbent, yellow-brown to dark reddish brown, translucent above and dark below, up to 2 mm long. Hypothallus contiguous for a group of sporangia, conspicuous, usually horny but sometimes membranous, colourless to dark brown. Peridium membranous, translucent, often somewhat thickened by granular deposits, dehiscence apical, leaving a cup- or vase-shaped base with the margin irregular or divided into petaloid lobes. Capillitium bright ochraceous yellow, consisting of free elaters 4-8 µm in diameter, marked with 3–5 spirals, these smooth or bearing a few scattered spines, with short, tapering tips. Spores bright ochraceous in mass, bright yellow by transmitted light, coarsely and prominently reticulate, 12–16 µm in diameter. Plasmodium white.
Widely distributed throughout temperate regions of the world (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969) but rare in the Northern Hemisphere and exceedingly common in the Southern Hemisphere. First reported from New Zealand by Colenso (1891), based on a specimen collected in Hawkes Bay. Also known from Auckland, Taranaki (Lister & Lister 1905), Taupo, Wellington, Buller, Westland, Fiordland, North Canterbury, South Canterbury, Dunedin, Southland, Stewart Island (Lister & Lister 1905), and Campbell Island, but undoubtedly present elsewhere.
Decaying wood or bark; occasionally fruiting on bryophytes.
& Alexopoulos (1969), Neubert et al. (1993), Ing (1999).
Trichia verrucosa is one of the most commonly encountered myxomycetes in the forests of New Zealand. Interestingly, it is rare in forests of the Northern Hemisphere (Farr 1958). Sporangia of this species are often colonised by the fungus Polycephalomyces tomentosus.

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Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. (1859) [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]

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Trichia verrucosa Berk. 1859 [1860]
[Not available]

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1cb1a817-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
26 May 1994
8 June 2023
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