24-03-2026 21:37
Elisabeth StöckliBonsoir,Sur bois (tronc) très pourri de conifère
25-03-2026 10:35
Hulda Caroline HolteHello,I collected this species growing on a dead b
26-03-2026 15:31
Åke Widgren
Hello,I found this one in October last year, on r
25-03-2026 22:23
Marc Detollenaere
Dear Forum,On a debarked stem of Tilia, we found s
24-03-2026 15:44
Åge OterhalsI hope someone can confirm the name of this collec
25-03-2026 20:53
François BartholomeeusenDear forum members,On 23 March 2026, I found sever
23-03-2026 20:16
Miguel Ángel Ribes
Good eveningI'm unable to identify this Coprotus o
25-03-2026 15:06
Bernard CLESSE
Bonjour à toutes et tous,Pourriez-vous me confirm
Posible madera de Abeto
Castillo Joseba,
07-05-2017 22:57
A ver si hay alguna sugerencia
Joseba
Lothar Krieglsteiner,
08-05-2017 08:32
Re : Posible madera de Abeto
Hi Joseba,
this looks like a Hyaloscypha to me - maybe H. britannica, but I did not compare the details.
Best regards from Lothar
Castillo Joseba,
09-05-2017 12:44
Re : Posible madera de Abeto
Gracias Lothar
Kosonen Timo,
09-05-2017 21:32
Re : Posible madera de Abeto
Hello,
A bit late here and also on the road without my books, but yes, it's very "Hyaloscypha". And why not britannica. Sporesize fits well and ecology (if it's softwood). Could you check it out? just put a thin cross section of wood under dissecting scope with lot's of light. Deciduous trees have relatively large vessels/pores = "holes". Softwood/Hardwood is enough. ///Britannica should not have that many septas in the hairs and here I see three - four(?) already. Could you check that too? I mean, hair shape also, and how many septas usually. Are the hairs tapering? Are there VB:s in paraphyses/_hairs_??
Don't know a matching Arachnopeziza, but if there are really a lot of septas in the hairs an Arachnopeziza with thin walled hairs can't be excluded.
Timo
A bit late here and also on the road without my books, but yes, it's very "Hyaloscypha". And why not britannica. Sporesize fits well and ecology (if it's softwood). Could you check it out? just put a thin cross section of wood under dissecting scope with lot's of light. Deciduous trees have relatively large vessels/pores = "holes". Softwood/Hardwood is enough. ///Britannica should not have that many septas in the hairs and here I see three - four(?) already. Could you check that too? I mean, hair shape also, and how many septas usually. Are the hairs tapering? Are there VB:s in paraphyses/_hairs_??
Don't know a matching Arachnopeziza, but if there are really a lot of septas in the hairs an Arachnopeziza with thin walled hairs can't be excluded.
Timo
Castillo Joseba,
09-05-2017 22:29
Re : Posible madera de Abeto
Hola Timo, mañana intentaré mirar todo lo que me propones, a ver que puedo aclarar.
Saludos
Joseba
Saludos
Joseba
Castillo Joseba,
10-05-2017 13:38
Kosonen Timo,
11-05-2017 21:22
Re : Posible madera de Abeto
yep, I'll take that as a conifer. Thanks for the extra pics.
These multiseptate hairs are interesting. H. britannica sensu Seppo (Huhtinen) has 1-2 septate hairs if I recall right. But I don't have a better name for this one. I suppose you are going to save this specimen? Once I get back to lab I need to recheck some things. I'll get back!
Timo
These multiseptate hairs are interesting. H. britannica sensu Seppo (Huhtinen) has 1-2 septate hairs if I recall right. But I don't have a better name for this one. I suppose you are going to save this specimen? Once I get back to lab I need to recheck some things. I'll get back!
Timo
Castillo Joseba,
11-05-2017 22:14
Re : Posible madera de Abeto
Ok esperare
Joseba
Joseba










