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05-02-2026 06:43

Stefan Blaser

Hello everybody, Any help on this one would be mu

03-02-2026 20:44

Zetti Mario

When I first saw this white mould on an Agaricus s

18-08-2025 15:07

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

.. 20.7.25, in subarctic habital. The liverwort i

02-02-2026 21:46

Margot en Geert Vullings

On a barkless poplar branch, we found hairy discs

02-02-2026 14:55

Andgelo Mombert Andgelo Mombert

Bonjour,Sur thalle de Lobaria pulmonaria.Conidiome

02-02-2026 14:33

Andgelo Mombert Andgelo Mombert

Bonjour,Sur le thalle de Peltigera praetextata, ne

31-01-2026 10:22

Michel Hairaud Michel Hairaud

Bonjour, Cette hypocreale parasite en nombre les

02-02-2026 09:29

Bernard CLESSE Bernard CLESSE

Bonjour à toutes et tous,Pour cette récolte de 2

01-02-2026 19:29

Nicolas Suberbielle Nicolas Suberbielle

Bonjour, Marie-Rose D'Angelo (Société Mycologiq

30-01-2026 22:49

éric ROMERO éric ROMERO

Bonjour tous, Récolté dans les Vosges le 22/10/

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Mollisia "subretincola"
Nina Filippova, 16-02-2013 12:52
Good day,

there is another specimen which goes under "subretincola", but it was collected from branches of Chamaedaphne dwarfshrub. It is regular on this substrate, was noticed several times.

Apothecia there some smaller, up to 1,5 mm, and hymenium hasn't green or olive tinge in color. The main difference in micro is croiziers, here more developed. The structure of tissues is similar to previous specimen, crystals present, KOH reaction of paraphyses also absent, spores some longer, pictures of them were done vitally in water, since small oil droplets now seen.


Apothecia from turbinate to cupulate, sessile, thick, up to 1,5 mm diam; outer surface brown at base, lighter at the edge, velvety, edge under high magnification ciliate; hymenium surface plane to concave, yellowish-gray; attached to bark by base without subiculum.


Ectal excipulum from textura globosa, cells with brown walls, 15 mk broad, in 3-5 layers; medulla from textura intricata, loosely arranged hyphae 2,5 broad, with yellowish exudates; crystalls in medulla abundant; hairs at flanks from 2-3 globose cells at base and upper clavate segment, up to 30 mk; edge hairs from 5 or more prismatic cells and upper cylindrical segment, about 50 x 5 mk; asci cylindrical, with clamp, pore euamyloid, 72,8-98 x 7-8,7; paraphyses cylindrical, exceeding the asci about 15 mk, segmented in basal part, scarsely branched, upper segment with VBs (torquose stain), KOH -, 3,5-4,6 broad; spores narrow-fusoid, 22 (20-23,7) x 2,5 (2,2-2,6) (Q=8,85; N=17).

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Hans-Otto Baral, 16-02-2013 15:36
Hans-Otto Baral
Re : Mollisia "subretincola"
This is Mollisia ramealis. It has actually similarities to retincola, including the crystals. The prismatic texture at the margin, running under a low angle, is thought to be typical.
Nina Filippova, 16-02-2013 15:47
Re : Mollisia "subretincola"
Thank you, it is interesting.
Andreas Gminder, 01-03-2013 11:35
Andreas Gminder
Re : Mollisia "subretincola"
Hello,

yes , Zotto is of course right.
But it is evident that this is no Mollisia in the current sense and there is a synonymous name for it Dibeloniella citrinella. Also the molecular studies show that "Mollisia" ramealis is quite far away from other mollisioid and pyrenpezizoid taxa. May be it is not even a Dermateaceae.

best regards,
Andreas
Hans-Otto Baral, 01-03-2013 11:51
Hans-Otto Baral
Re : Mollisia "subretincola"
Hi Andreas

you are right with the synonymy with Dibeloniela citrinella, see my drawing of the type HB 6471. From a morphological point of view, Nannfeldt should have placed the species in Belonopsis because of the crystals, isn't it? And isn't Mollisia ligni also quite an untypical Mollisia?

Judging from the phylotrees I have copied into a directory, I see that Dermea/Pezicula and Mollisia and allies incl. Vibrissea are quite unrelated (f.ex. Peterson & Pfister 2010, Cyttaria; Schoch et al. 2009, suppl., Fig. 6D; Wang, Binder et al. 2006). So we should better speak of Mollisiaceae.

I regret I do not have your phylotree of Mollisia, I only remember your lecture in Melle,  ssuming that it is unpublished. I cannot imagine that it makes sense to exclude M. ligni from the Mollisiaceae (which presently includes also Hysteropezizella, though this is another question of a possible split at family level). Do you have any idea what could be related to it? 

A question in this concern would be which genus might be the more primitive, plesiomorphic one, Mollisia or Pyrenopeziza. Do you have an idea? In the case that Mollisia is more primitive, then the VBs should have got lost in Pyrenoeziza, and M. ramealis might represent a rather ancient taxon in the family.

Zotto