Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991

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
Show more

Click to collapse Details Info

Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991

Click to collapse Biostatus Info

Endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

(E. Horak) G. Garnier
E. Horak
G. Garnier
1991
112
ICN
species
Cortinarius castaneodiscus

Click to collapse Classification Info

castaneodiscus

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

NEW ZEALAND: North Island: North Auckland, Hunua Range, Franklin Co., Mangatangi Valley, under Nothofagus-Leptospermum, 19.VI.1974, leg. HAYDON, PDD 32253,(ZT 76/239). - Gisborne: Urewera N. P., Ngamoko Track, under Nothofagus-Leptospermum, 22.V.1981, leg. HORAK (ZT 641).South Island: Nelson, Tophouse Saddle, under N. solandri var. cliffortioides-menziesii-fusca, sometimes in association with Sphagnum, 1.V.1968, leg. HORAK (ZT 68/338). - Westland, Ngahere, Lake Haupiri, Kopara, under N. fusca, 13.XII.1967, leg. HORAK, PDD 27178, holotype (ZT 67/249, isotype).
Pileus -50 mm, hemispherical or conico-convex becoming broadly umbonate or campanulate; red-brown or chestnut brown at centre, yellow or orange towards margin; viscid to subglutinous when moist, innately fibrillose in dry condition, often radially wrinkled, hygrophanous, margin distinctly striate, with fibrillose to agglutinated semipersistent veil remnants along margin. - Lamellae 10-20,5(-7), emarginate and subdecurrent with short tooth, ventricose, -5 mm wide; yellow, ochre or orange at first turning rust orange in mature specimens, edges concolorous or paler, fimbriate or subserrate from cheilocystidia. - Stipe -70 x -7 mm, cylindrical or subclavate, often subfusoid at base, single or cespitose; sulphur yellow to yellow-ochre, below fugaceous cortina with several yellow to yellow-brown viscid zones and belts of veil; dry (except veil remnants when fresh), longitudinally fibrillose, hollow, often with yellow rhizomorphs. - C o n t ex t yellow-orange in pileus and stipe. - Odour and taste raphanoid (or like raw potatoes), often faint. - Chemical reactions on pileus: KOH - red; HCl, NH3-negative. Spore print rust brown. - Spores (7-) 7.5-9.5 x (4-) 5-6 µm, ovoid, verrucose, rust-brown. Basidia 25-40 x 7-10 µm,4-spored. - Cheilocystidia conspicuous, composed of articulated cellchains, terminal cells (10-30 x 12  µm) ovoid or clavate, membranes thin-walled, hyaline. - Pileipellis a cutis or trichoderm composed of cylindrical hyphae (4-8 µm diam.), terminal cells cylindrical or fusoid-conical, membranes gelatinized, with red-brown to purple-grey plasmatic pigment dissolving in KOH, subcuticular layers cellular. - Clamp connections present.
On soil in Nothofagus-forest (N. solandri var. cliffortioides-fusca-menziesii), sometimes in mixed stands with Leptospermum spp. - New Zealand.
Pileus -50 mm, ex hemisphaerico campanulatus, castaneus vel luteoaurantiacus marginem versus, viscidus. Lamellae emarginatae, luteae dein ferrugineoaurantiacae. Stipes -70 x -7 mm, cylindricus vel subclavatus, sulphureus, zonis luteobrunneis subviscidis e velo obtectus. Odor saporque raphanoidei. KOH - ruber. Sporae (7) 7.5-9.5 x (4-)5-6 , ovoideae, verrucosae. Cheilocystidia conspicua. Ad terram in silvis nothofagineis. Novazelandia.
In New Zealand D. castaneodisca is found to be a common species in mixed Nothofagus-Leptospermum forests. There is ecological evidence, however, that this agaric can enter ectomycorrhiza only with Nothofagus spp. (HORAK, unpubl.). Macroscopically D. castaneodisca is recognized by the yellow-orange pileus with maroon red disk. In moist conditions both the pileal surface and the yellow-orange veil remnants scattered over the stipe are viscid or glutinous. Based upon these characters D. castaneodisca must be considered a typical representative of Dermocybe subgen. Icterinula (MOSER & HORAK, 1975). Seven different pigments have been extracted from carpophores of D. castaneodisca. Apart from endocrocin, however, the molecular properties of the remaining six components are not yet elucidated (KELLER & al., 1988).
Holotypus PDD 27178.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Click to collapse Collections Info

Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
New Zealand
Buller
Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
New Zealand
Gisborne
Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
New Zealand
Nelson
Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
New Zealand
Rangitikei
Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
New Zealand
Taupo
Cortinarius castaneodiscus (E. Horak) G. Garnier 1991
New Zealand
Wairarapa

Click to collapse Notes Info

taxonomic status
subgenus Icterinula

Click to collapse Metadata Info

9fe6e52c-0155-425f-944c-d029aac0139d
scientific name
Names_Fungi
1 June 2004
13 October 2022
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top