Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829

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

Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829

Click to collapse Biostatus Info

Indigenous, non-endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

(Ditmar) Fr.
Ditmar
Fr.
1829
120
ICN
species
Didymium iridis

Click to collapse Classification Info

iridis

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829

None in PDD
Fruiting body a stalked sporangium, scattered to gregarious, up to 1.5 mm tall. Sporotheca [ital]globose or slightly depressed, erect, white, 0.4–0.6 mm in diameter. Peridium thin, membranous, nearly or quite colourless, more or less densely covered with white lime crystals. Stalk slender, cylindrical, usually two-thirds or more of the total height, yellow or yellowish brown, translucent. Columella white or nearly so, turbinate, depressed-globose or subglobose. Capillitium delicate, consisting of colourless or pale yellow-brown branching threads, always hyaline at the tips. Spores brown in mass, pale violaceous by transmitted light, minutely warted or nearly smooth, 7–9 µm in diameter. Plasmodium yellowish or brown.
Regarded as cosmopolitan by Martin & Alexopoulos (1969). Reported (as Didymium nigripes var. xanthopus) from New Zealand by Cheesman & Lister (1915) without naming a specific locality.
Dead leaves and other types of plant debris.
Martin & Alexopoulos (1969).
As noted under Didymium bahiense, D. iridis is at the centre of a species complex to which many of the long-stalked species of Didymium have been assigned by some authors. If recognised as distinct, as is the case herein, D. iridis can be recognised by the prominent, white, clavate columella that becomes visible after most of the spores have been lost from the sporangium. The early records of this species from New Zealand may refer to D. bahiense, which appears to be much more common. However, several specimens obtained from moist chamber cultures during more recent studies (unpubl. data) do appear to represent D. iridis.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. (1829)
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. (1829)
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. (1829)
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. (1829)
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. (1829)
Didymium nigripes var. xanthopus (Ditmar) Lister (1894)

Click to collapse Collections Info

Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
New Zealand
Auckland
Didymium iridis (Ditmar) Fr. 1829
New Zealand
Buller

Click to collapse Metadata Info

7f5cf688-d9e3-11d5-bebb-00508bca8de8
scientific name
Names_Fungi
15 November 2001
15 November 2001
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top