Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874

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

Click to collapse Details Info

Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874

Click to collapse Biostatus Info

Indigenous, non-endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

Rostaf.
Rostaf.
1874
152
ICN
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
species
Didymium dubium

Click to collapse Classification Info

dubium

Click to collapse Associations Info

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874

PDD 74412, 74413, 74414.
Fruiting body a plasmodiocarp, thin, flat, 1–30 mm long and 1–6 mm wide, 0.3–0.5 thick, usually accompanied by small, flat-pulvinate, sporangia. Peridium membranous, firm, colourless, purplish or tawny, more or less covered with a white, often floccose crust of minute, stellate, rod-like or nodular lime crystals, but these may be compacted into a limy crust, sometimes nearly limeless and then dark, or the lime occasionally in the form of scales. Columella usually represented by the thickened base. Capillitium abundant, rigid, the threads brown to pallid, radiating, branching and anastomosing freely from nearly transverse bars, thus forming an elastic net that separates readily from the base and peridium. Spores black in mass, purplish brown by transmitted light, often darker on one side, distinctly and closely warted, 10–15 µm in diameter. Plasmodium grey.
Known from widely scattered localities in the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969) and apparently absent or at least very rare in the tropics (Farr 1976). First reported from New Zealand by Stagg (1982), based on a specimen from Westland. Also known from Central Otago
Living plants, leaf litter and other types of plant debris; most commonly associated with such substrates near the edges of melting snowbanks in alpine regions but also known to occur in lowland situations.
Martin & Alexopoulos (1969), Nannenga-Bremekamp (1991), Neubert et al. (1995), Ing (1999).
This species is often relatively common in alpine regions of the Southern Alps, where it fruits on living plants and plant debris near the edges of melting snowbanks (Stephenson & Johnston 2003). The flat, grey plasmodiocarps are often large enough to be easily noticed when they fruit on living plants.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)
Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
Didymium dubium Rostaf. (1874)

Click to collapse Collections Info

Didymium dubium Rostaf. 1874
[Not available]

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb1d024-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
4 November 1994
20 November 2001
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top