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Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845

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Threat status: Data deficient
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Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845

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Endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

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Berk.
Berk.
1845
175
dubious name
ICN
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
NZ holotype
species
Antennaria scoriadea
[New Zealand] Lord Auckland's group and Campbell's Island; on the branches and twigs of several shrubs and trees, but especially of Dracophyllum longifolium. Typification: Tab. LXVII, fig. III , syntype K(M) 48949

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scoriadea

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Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845

1. Antennaria scoriadea, Berk.; spongiosa, floccis fasciculatis sursum lateraliter connexis, peridiis subellipticis irregularibus. (Tab. LXVII. Fig. III.) Hab. Lord Auckland's group and Campbell's Island; on the branches and twigs of several shrubs and trees, but especially of Dracophyllum longifolium. Spongiosa, ramos incrustans. Flocci ¼-1/2 unc. longi, fasciculati, superne processibus brevibus lateralibus more Zygnematis connexi, subtus e membrana reticulata vel mycelio repente nascenti, filamentis tenuioribus immixti, erecti, irregulariter ramosi. Articuli moniliformes vel praesertmi in filamentis ultimis continui, laeves, nucleo globoso so- litario. Perithecia subelliptica, irregularia. A very singular substance, which must strike the traveller through the woods especially of New Zealand or of Lord Auckland's group, in both which localities it is very abundant, resembling charcoal, and sometimes so widely diffused that the branches look as if burnt. The colonists of the former islands call it "the black moss." Distinguished from A. pannosa and A. Robiimonii by its long fasciculate threads, giving it exactly the habit of Scorias spongiosa. The finest specimens have a rigid bristly appearance, quite different from that of any other species of the genus. This has been also gathered in Valparaiso by Mr. Bridges, and at the Swan River by Mr. Drummond. I have not been able to trace the developement of the peridia in the Auckland Island specimens, but it would ap- pear that, as in M. Robinsouii, M. and B., they arise either from a swollen articulation or from a process given off by an articulation, in either case they are dependent on a simple metamorphosis of the latter. Plate LXVII. Fig. III. — 1, a plant of the natural size ; 2, flocci from the base of the tufts, with a portion of the cellular matrix ; 3, flocci from the summits of t he tufts, laterally aggregated ; 4, sporangia ; 5, portions of the filaments in various states : — all more or less highly magnified.

Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845

[Notes from Kew Type specimen, PRJ 2010] Kew images.

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Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. (1845)
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. (1845)
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. (1845)
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. (1845)
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. (1845)
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. 1845
Antennaria scoriadea Berk. (1845)

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taxonomic status
Hughes (1967) noted that there are several sooty mould species in the type specimen. MEL has Colenso 1132
typification
[New Zealand] Lord Auckland's group and Campbell's Island; on the branches and twigs of several shrubs and trees, but especially of Dracophyllum longifolium. Typification: Tab. LXVII, fig. III , syntype K(M) 48949

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1cb1aed2-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
16 February 1993
27 November 2013
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