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Cheimonophyllum haedinum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Valade & P.-A. Moreau 2022

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Cheimonophyllum haedinum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Valade & P.-A. Moreau (2022)
Cheimonophyllum haedinum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Valade & P.-A. Moreau 2022

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Recorded in error
New Zealand
Political Region
See C. 'Omahu'. The NZ Taxon is related to, but not the same as C. haedinum

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(Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Valade & P.-A. Moreau
Berk. & M.A. Curtis
Valade & P.-A. Moreau
2022
ICN
species
Cheimonophyllum haedinum

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New Zealand: North I.; Auckland: Waitakere Ra., Parau, on exposed roots, B.S. Parris, 13 May 71, PDD 60839; Northland; Pukenui Walkway, near Whangarei, on mossy bark of dead wood, G. Ridley, 21 May 1992, PDD 60840.
Basidiome 3-5 mm diam., pure white, drying pale yellow brown, translucent when moist, fan-shaped to reniform, convex, sessile, attached dorsally or excentrically to the substratum by a subiculum of white hyphae, or sometimes laterally stipitate, or occasionally almost centrally stipitate when young. Pileus surface white, velutinous to villose, margin inrolled at first, then even to sometimes lobed. Lamellae white, 1-2 series, up to 8 principal ones, moderately distant and fairly broad, with occasional interveining. Stipe (when present) 1-2 x 0.5-1 mm, white and translucent when fresh, pubescent when dry. Smell and taste unknown. Spore print cream.

Spores 4.7 6.5 x 4-5.5 (5.2 x 4.8) µm, Q = 1.08, sub spherical to broadly pyriform, very thin walled, smooth, hyaline; inamyloid, not dextrinoid, acyanophilic, contents granular, apiculus cylindrical and very distinct, or slightly conical in pyriform spores, often with a dark, subterminal scar. Basidia 15-30 x 5.5 µm, cylindric to clavate, 1-2-4-spored, sterigmata variable in length, 2.5-6 µm; some basidia-like structures also present, with 1 or 2 apical, capitate processes slightly resembling saccate sterigmata and spores (pseudobasidia). Pleurocystidia and cheilocystidia none but occasional awl-shaped cells with pointed ends were seen extending from the hymenium. Trama has a faintly differentiated central strand of somewhat parallel hyphae, (5 µm diam., giving a bilateral appearance; lateral hyphae more loosely interwoven and merging into the filamentous subhymenium; a few oleiferous hyphae present in the trama. Context of interwoven hyphae 4 5 µm diam., some inflated to 9 µm. Pileipellis trichodermal, of erect hyphal endings from the context, sometimes in clumps of 3 or 4. Stipe cortex of narrow,  somewhat thick-walled hyphae with some scattered, short, narrow, simple protuberances (10-15 x 1-1.5 µm). All hyphae with clamp-connections.

On mossy bark of dead wood in mixed podocarp broadleaf forest.
This fungus resembles the descriptions of Singer (1964) and others with one or two differences. The basidia were 1 -, 2- or 4- spored rather than 4-spored only and, although awl-shaped cheilocystidia were seen, they did not form a distinct layer as described by Horak (1968) and Pegler (1983). The presence of cheilocystidia in this genus is controversial. Dennis (1953) did not report them in the type of C. candidissimum, nor in Pleurotus subhaedinus (Murrill) Murrill and P. subelatinus (Murrill) Murrill, now considered as synonyms of C. candidissimum. Pleurotus dictyorhizas, possibly also a Cheimonophyllum species, was also described by Josserand (1955) as having awl-shaped cheilocystidia, "rather numerous". Singer (1964) found what he called cheilocystidia in C. candidissimum "on or near the heteromorphous or sub heteromorphous edge intermixed with basidia", but he later (Singer 1969) described them as "modified tramal hyphae". In support of this view, Reijnders & Stalpers ( 1992), in their study of tramal types in the Aphyllophorales and Agaricales, have shown that in C. candidissimum the development of the hymenophoral trama is trametoid, that is, "a conspicuous tuft of loosely interwoven, sterile hyphae is present on the edge of the young gill", and they claim that the filamentous, somewhat branched cheilocystidia mentioned by earlier workers are sterile hyphae of the trama. Similar structures have also been found, although only in the vicinity of the margin of the pileus, in mature basidiomes of C. roseum (see below).

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Cheimonophyllum candidissimum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Singer 1955
Cheimonophyllum candidissimum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Singer 1955
Cheimonophyllum candidissimum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Singer (1955)
Cheimonophyllum candidissimum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Singer (1955)
Cheimonophyllum candidissimum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Singer (1955)
Pleurotus candidissimus (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Sacc. (1887)

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Cheimonophyllum haedinum (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Valade & P.-A. Moreau 2022
[Not available]

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dc23508c-f6c0-4817-82aa-1a1960ebed35
scientific name
Names_Fungi
29 January 2023
29 January 2023
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