Dear friends, I have found this strange pore-bearing flattened (crust) fungus, which is not Sebacina as was my first impression, but later I noticed pores and so it is something else and I was thinking about Abortiporus sp. (biennis) but I have some concerns, because it does not have those orange droplets, and essentially it is all white (with few parts turning beige). Is there other species matching my finding ? I have a dried specimen if it helps further (hope to trace spores). It had the habit of Sebacina , like a huge amoeba engulfing leaf litter and even climbing on bark of an adjacent tree.
Abortiporus ?
- Steve_mt
- Erledigt
Es gibt 3 Antworten in diesem Thema, welches 663 mal aufgerufen wurde. Der letzte Beitrag () ist von Steve_mt.
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Ahoj, Steve,
there are aspects which tend to remind me of ceratomyxa;
anyhow it would be interesting, if possible, to see further development.
Greetings
Malone
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Tnx! I'll take a break from what I am doing and do its microscopy now! This is 10cm x 15cm approx,
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So here are further images and information
-Basidiomycete
-Mycellium intricate gently curved hyphae, 6-8 um thick, septate, congophilous
-Terminal hypha somewhat stains stonger (or there is some myceloplasmic matter)
-Clamp junctions frequent at the terminal septum of the last hypha, large and knobby
-Spores comma-shaped, congophobic (does not stain at all), with (1-)2 small oil bodies, 5um x 2um
-Basidia observed, with distinct dark bodies (oil bodies probably) and (2-)4 sterigmata
Not Sebacina, Not a myxo, Maybe Abortiporus but spores of my specimen are too narrow for A. biennis
comapred to here https://www.bioimages.org.uk/html/r145676.htm?15
I saw something similar on the net here:
Mushroom things getting serious after some rain, Oct. 2013No preamble! Go! I had seen something at the base of a huge old oak on a rural road, and thought it was a clump of dead leaves on a fallen b...mycologista.blogspot.com