Download Copy a link to this page Cite this record

Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996

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

Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone, Mycologia 88 (1996)
Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996

Click to collapse Biostatus Info

Indigenous, non-endemic
Present
New Zealand
Political Region

Click to collapse Nomenclature Info

Nakasone
Lév.
(Lév.) Nakasone
1996
ICN
species
Schizophyllum amplum

Click to collapse Classification Info

Click to collapse Descriptions Info

ROSACEAE. Pyrus malus: Hawke's Bay, Hastings, 10 m. Canterbury, Papanui, 15 m. SALICACEAE. Populus nigra var. italica: Wellington, Lake Papaitonga, 20 m. Otago, Outram, 70 m. Salix babylonica: Canterbury, Twizel River, 650 m. Otago, Earnscleugh Research Orchard, 200 m.
Hymenophore pileate, sessile, gelatinous when fresh, horny when dry, solitary or crowded, rarely confluent. Pilei cupulate, disciform, or umbonate-affixed when attached by a narrow vertex, 1-10 mm radius, 1-15 mm wide, when confluent extending laterally to 3 cm; pileus surface white, greyish when old, densely tomentose; hymenial surface reddish-brown, or purple, at first even, in large specimens somewhat rugulose when dry. Context 0.3-0.5 mm thick, brown and glistening in section, basal layer of radiately arranged mainly parallel hyphae embedded in a gelatinous matrix; generative hyphae 5-7 µm diameter, walls 1.5-2.5 µm thick, somewhat gelatinous, with clamp connections; cortex tinted, of more firmly compacted hyphae, abhymenial hairs freely convoluted, 3-4 µm diameter. Hymenial layer to 70 µm deep, a dense palisade of basidia and paraphyses. Basidia subclavate; 16-24 x 4-5 µm, bearing 4 spores; sterigmata erect, slender, to 3 µm long. Paraphyses subclavate, 12-18 x 3.5-4 µm. Spores narrowly suballantoid, apiculate, 9-10 x 2.5-3 µm walls smooth, hyaline, 0.2 µm thick; sometimes adhering in fours.
DISTRIBUTION: Europe, North America, Australia, New Zealand.
HABITAT: Solitary or gregarious on bark of dead branches.
A. ampla may be recognised by the white, tomentose fructifications frequently pendent by a narrow vertex, with dark plum or purple hymenial surface, subgelatinous context, and narrow suballantoid, nonamyloid spores. In macrofeatures fructifications resemble scattered pilei of Stereum purpureum, from which the species is readily separated by the absence of the zone of vesicles which characterises the former. Formerly I recorded (1956, p. 232) the species under the name of Cytidia flocculenta, and Cleland (1935, p. 262) also recorded its presence in South Australia under this name. Donk (1959, p. 78) has shown the species to be Auriculariopsis ampla, although inadvertently he had recorded it both as Cytidia salicina (p. 74) and A. ampla (p. 78).
TYPE LOCALITY: Europe.

Click to collapse Taxonomic concepts Info

Auriculariopsis ampla (Lév.) Maire
Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996
Cyphella ampla Lév.
Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996
Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996
Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone
Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996

Click to collapse Collections Info

Schizophyllum amplum (Lév.) Nakasone 1996
[Not available]

Click to collapse Metadata Info

dac3b96b-6485-44a3-ad1d-c3450dd680e7
scientific name
Names_Fungi
12 September 2012
Click to go back to the top of the page
Top