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B Shelbourne• Macro and habitat suggest Hyaloscyphaceae s.l.
09-11-2024 16:41
Stephen MartinHello everyone, we have recently published a paper
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Yves AntoinetteBonjour, je pense qu'il peut s'agir de Trichoderma
Brunnipila brunneola
B Shelbourne,
21-04-2024 14:29
• B. brunneola: Quercus leaves, croziers, possibly spore size.
• After a quick look through the B. folder, I could see few other characters that easily distinguish it from other B. sp.
Habitat: On dead leaves of Quercus robur, both sides of the leaf but more common on underside, growing along veins, dampish in leaf litter, under herbaceous plants at the side of a path, mixed deciduous woodland, Low Weald, England, Mid-April, after rain.
Associates: Many small black discs - pyrenomycete?, some with whitish patch on leaf.
Apothecia: Leaves found with ~30, in smallish groups, scattered to gregarious, 0.2-0.4 mm diameter, < ~0.4 mm high, cupulate to cyathiform, oval from above, usually short stipitate, superficial, firm-gelatinous texture; receptacle covered by dense dark-brown hairs, with frosted or pruinose appearance (hyaline apices), hairs longer at upper flanks and margin; stipe whitish and apparently with very few hairs; margin raised, in-rolled, appears almost closed until maturity, possibly closing when drier, initially with whitish hairs, then more brownish like receptacle; disc whitish-grey, opaque, concave, slightly more plane in maturity.
Storage and method: Stored overnight in a damp box, an edge and central section taken from an average-size mature-looking apothecium, mounted in water, some pressure applied afterwards to separate hymenium, IKI added to water mount.
IKI: Rings rb, first dirty red then blue, upper ring bluing first, calycina-type, many asci with dextrinoid ascoplasm, other cells yellowish contents.
Asci: Cylindrical-clavate, croziers with perforations, calycina-shape rings, apex conical and rounded to truncate,
- Vital mature: ~45-55 x 4.5-6 µm, pars sporifera ~40-50%, more clavate, apex conical, pore refracting slightly, biseriate with one spore at the apex, spores slightly angled,
- Dead: ~40-45 x 3.5-4.5 µm, pars sporifera ~70-80%, apex more acute and truncate, occasionally lageniform (no photos), apical thickening ~1-1.5 µm, 1-2.5-seriate,
Spores: Narrow ellipsoid-fusiform, usually heteropolar with the base more attenuated and acute, a few small greenish LBs towards the poles, OCI 1.
Vital spores measured in water: (6.8) 7.2 - 9.4 (10.1) × 2.1 - 2.7 µm, Q = (2.9) 3 - 3.77 (3.8), n = 13, mean = 8.1 × 2.5 µm, Q mean = 3.3.
Paraphyses: Tall, lanceolate, ~4-5 µm wide, apex acute-pointed, most appear uniseptate with apical cell noticeable longer but possibly some 2 septate, protruding ~10-15 µm above asci, some with a medium-size greenish inclusion about midway, many vacuolising even in section in water.
Exudate: Oily residue in water mount, at apex of hairs golden-yellowish resinous exudate, with small to large, hyaline-greenish crystals.
Hairs: Brown, cylindrical, at the margin ~(60) 70-100 µm, more frequent, pointing inwards, at flanks ~40-50 µm or 7-15 µm long with 0-1 septa, ~5-6 µm wide, apex often capitate ~7-8 µm wide (when mature?), apical cell more hyaline, apparently ~4-5 septate, base simple; ornamentation of tiny warts, quite densely covered, globular to amorphous, refracting greenish, protruding < ~0.5 µm.
Ectal ex: Internally appears to be textura intricata, with a layer of textura porecta, at the surface textura globosa-prismatica, parallel to surface.
Stipe: Not observed, but textura intricata around base of the receptacle.
B Shelbourne,
21-04-2024 15:38
Re : Brunnipila brunneola
Can't see any sequence data for this species in GB, but there are a few other species.
Hans-Otto Baral,
21-04-2024 17:26
Re : Brunnipila brunneola
Under the name Dasyscyphus fuscescens, which was currently thought to be a synonym, exist CBS cultures and sequences from Quercus leaves, e.g. AY853231.
These are very distant from B. fuscescens on Fagus leaves and cupules, although the morphology is very similar. This is a very difficult genus regarding species concepts.
I send you my tree.
The wide spores are typical of brunneola in contrast to fuscescens.