Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909

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 foreign
Show more

Click to collapse Details Info

Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister in Lister, Guide Brit. Mycetozoa, Ed. 3 31 (1909)
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909

Click to collapse Biostatus Info

Exotic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

(Racib.) G. Lister
Racib.
G. Lister
1909
31
ICN
species
Comatricha elegans

Click to collapse Classification Info

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

DWM 3138
Fruiting body a stalked sporangium, gregarious to scattered, 1 to 2 mm tall. Sporotheca globose to ovate, erect, purplish or liliaceous brown, 0.3–0.5 mm in diameter. Hypothallus inconspicuous. Stalk slender, subulate, 0.8–1.6 mm long. Peridium silvery, fugacious, rarely persistent. Columella short, divided below the center of the sporotheca (or sometimes at, or occasionally below the base) into several stout branches that give rise to the capillitium. Capillitium rather loose, the threads flexuous, slender, anastomosing. Spores reddish brown or pale to reddish lilac in mass, pale violaceous brown by transmitted light, minutely punctate, 8–10 µm in diameter. Plasmodium watery white.
Reported from widely scattered localities in Asia, Europe, North America, and South Africa (Martin & Alexopoulos 1969). First reported from New Zealand by Mitchell (1992), based on a specimen appearing in moist chamber culture prepared with bark of Pinus sp. collected in Taupo/Bay of Plenty.
Decaying wood, especially that of conifers.
Martin & Alexopoulos (1969), Nannenga-Bremekamp (1991), Ing (1999), Neubert et al. (2000).
This species, which is placed in the genus Comatricha by some authors, is similar morphologically to Comatricha nigra but can be distinguished on the basis of a columella that becomes divided to form several stout branches before reaching the center of the sporotheca. In C. nigra, the columella extends well beyond the center of the sporotheca. Moreover, Collaria elegans tends to be much less common than Comatricha nigra.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Collaria elegans (Racib.) Dhillon & Nann.-Bremek. ex Ing (1982)
Collaria elegans (Racib.) Dhillon & Nann.-Bremek. ex Ing
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Collaria elegans (Racib.) Dhillon & Nann.-Bremek. ex Ing (1982)
Collaria elegans (Racib.) Dhillon & Nann.-Bremek. ex Ing (1982)
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister (1909)
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister (1909)
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister (1909)
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister (1909)

Click to collapse Collections Info

Comatricha elegans (Racib.) G. Lister 1909
[Not available]

Click to collapse Metadata Info

1cb1d62d-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
15 April 2001
3 October 2003
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top