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Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966

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Laccaria lateritia Malençon, Bull. Soc. Mycol. France 82 (1966)
Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966

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Exotic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region
Type from Morocco. Name currently used in a phylogenetically imprecise sense. Usually with Eucalyptus or Pinus. Records with indigenous myrtaceae require comparison with L. paraphysata. [JAC]

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Malençon
Malençon
1966
ICN
Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966
species
Laccaria lateritia

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lateritia

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Under (1) Eucalyptus spp., Auckland: Hamilton, 31.V.1969, P. K. C. Austwick; 26.iv.l971, E. P. White; Whangarei, 14.V.1970, J. B. Taylor, PDD 29383. (2) Pinus radiata and Leptospermum scoparium, Auckland: Riverhead State Forest, 10.ix.l959, R. F. R. McN., PDD 19011; 12.vi.l967, R. F. R. McN., PDD 25966-7, PDD 25970-1; Waitakere Ranges, Goldies Bush, 9.V.1965, J. M. Dingley, PDD 24525: Blockhouse Bay, 9.vi.l967, 30.V.1967, 2.vii.l967, R. F. R. McN., PDD 25965, PDD 25964, PDD 25975; Maungakawa, l,v.l971, E. P. White; Swanson, 14.V.1970, J. S. Cole and B. S. Parris, PDD 28279. (3) Pomaderris kumeraho, Auckland: New Lynn, 6.V.1967, G. M. Young, PDD 25825. (4) on lawn, Auckland: Mt Albert, 6.vii.l967, B. R. Young, PDD 25969.
PILEUS: 1-3.5 cm diam., hemispherical when young, convex to plano-convex at maturity, centre of pileus often truncate and flattened, or occasionally centrally depressed, hygrophanous, non-viscid, inconspicuously pellucid-striate at margins when wet, not so when dry, finely furfuraceous, reddish brown to dark reddish brown, drying pallid fawn to buff. Cuticle composed of unspecialised, repent, parallel or slightly interwoven, thin-walled, clamped hyphae 7-14 µm diam. LAMELLAE: adnexed to adnate, distant, intermixed, thick, to 5 mm deep, flesh pink, glaucous. STIPE: 2.5-7 cm long, ± equal or slightly tapering apically, 2-5 mm diam., dry, hollow, often twisted, coarsely and sparingly longitudinally fibrillose giving stipe a silky sheen, reddish brown; flesh concolorous: basal mycelium white. SPORES: spore print white when fresh: spores globose to subglobose, apiculate, hyaline, inamyloid, finely echinulate, 9.5-12.5 µm diam. including spines, spines to 0.8 µm long, HYMENIUM: basidia clavate, hyaline, 32-45 X 7-10.5 µm, 2-(3)-spored, sterigmata to 10 µm long: paraphyses sparse, simple, filiform, to 4 µm diam. HYMENOPHORAL TRAMA: regular, composed of tinted, ± parallel, long-celled hyphae; clamp connections present. CONTEXT OF PILEUS: thin, reddish brown. SMELL AND TASTE: not distinctive. CHEMICAL CHARACTERS: FeSO4 on pileus and context—rapidly dark grey; KOH and NH4OH on pileus and context—n.r.
Gregarious to caespitose under introduced and native trees and shrubs, occasionally not associated with woody plants.
Malencon, Bull. trimest. Soc. mycol. Fr. 82: 183, fig. 1.1966.

Laccaria ohiensis has been comprehensively discussed by Singer (1967). In a correlative study of macroscopic and microscopic characters, and after taking into account ecological and phytogeographical considerations, Singer (1967) concluded that the species listed above as synonyms of L. ohiensis, each represented the sum of a series of collections from a particular phytogeographical region. New Zealand collections agree closely with L. lateritia, a species associated with Acacia, Eucalyptus, Pinus, and Quercus in North Africa, and it is perhaps significant that while L. ohiensis is relatively common in warmer parts of New Zealand, it has not been found in colder regions.

L. ohiensis is most probably an introduced species. It has been found only in habitats extensively altered by man, usually in association with introduced trees known to form ectotrophic mycorrhizas. A notable exception is the collection associated with the native mycorrhiza-former, Pomaderris kumeraho. In this instance, fructifications appeared around the base of a potted plant in a commercial nursery. The ability of Laccaria ohiensis to live as a facultatively mycorrhizal species is well illustrated by PDD 25969. The site on which these fructifications appeared had previously carried young Pinus radiata trees. Although these trees had all been cut down to ground level and the site made into lawn, fructifications of Laccaria ohiensis regularly appeared for at least seven years after the death of their higher plant partner.

L. ohiensis is characterised by the reddish brown pileus, longitudinally fibrillose stipe, bisporous basidia, and finely echinulate spores. It has not previously been recorded from New Zealand.

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Laccaria fraterna (Sacc.) Pegler
Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966
Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966
Laccaria lateritia

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Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966
New Zealand
Mid Canterbury
Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966
New Zealand
Nelson
Laccaria lateritia Malençon 1966
New Zealand
Wanganui

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1cb1d400-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
15 April 2001
22 April 2019
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