Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891

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

Click to collapse Details Info

Physarum nucleatum Rex, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 43 389 (1891)
Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891

Click to collapse Biostatus Info

Indigenous, non-endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

Rex
Rex
1891
389
ICN
Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
USA
species
Physarum nucleatum

Click to collapse Classification Info

nucleatum

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891

None in PDD
Fruiting body a stalked sporangium (or rarely plasmodiocarpous), gregarious to crowded, up to 1.8 mm tall. Sporotheca globose, erect or nodding, 0.3–0.5 mm in diameter. Stalk slender, subulate, yellowish white, rugose, not calcareous, 0.5–1.5 mm long. Hypothallus membranous, discoid to irregular, colourless to light brown. Peridium consisting of a single layer, membranous, studded with rounded, white calcareous nodules, the lime sometimes scanty and then appearing metallic, the lower portion thicker and remaining as a collar on the stalk after the upper portion has disappeared. Columella usually lacking, small and inconspicuous when present. Capillitium dense, consisting of small, white, rounded lime nodes and slender, hyaline filaments, the lime nodes usually aggregated in the centre to form a conspicuous white, globose or somewhat irregular ball of lime, the latter free from the stalk and thus not representing a true pseudocolumella, albeit resembling such a structure. Spores black in mass, clear lilaceous by transmitted light, minutely warted, 6.0–7.5 µm in diameter. Plasmodium grey.
Reported from widely scattered localities in the Northern Hemisphere and also South America (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969) but apparently most common in warm temperate to tropical regions of the world. Reported from New Zealand by Rawson (1937), based on a specimen collected in Dunedin.
Decaying wood and bark.
Martin & Alexopoulos (1969), Ing (1999).
This species is rather similar in appearance to Physarum globuliferum but lacks a columella and the stalk is not calcareous. The central lime ball is a useful diagnostic feature but is sometimes not present.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
Physarum nucleatum Rex (1891)
Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
Physarum nucleatum Rex (1891)
Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
Physarum nucleatum Rex (1891)
Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
Physarum nucleatum Rex (1891)
Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
Physarum nucleatum Rex (1891)

Click to collapse Collections Info

Physarum nucleatum Rex 1891
New Zealand
Auckland

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb1d038-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
8 June 1994
23 November 2001
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top