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18-09-2025 08:35

Edmond POINTE Edmond POINTE

Bonjour amis mycologues,Trouvé sur moquette de ch

17-09-2025 19:43

Philippe PELLICIER

Sur branche morte de Mélèze. Les ascospores sphÃ

18-09-2025 19:40

Sylvie Le Goff

BonjourPensez vous que le genre Pulvinula puisse c

18-09-2025 16:14

Bernard Declercq Bernard Declercq

Hello,I am looking for a copy of following paper:H

17-09-2025 16:14

Philippe PELLICIER

Apothécies enterrées, fermées au début puis s'

17-09-2025 10:50

Heather Merrylees

Hi there!I am hoping for any advice on the identif

11-09-2025 16:57

Jason Karakehian Jason Karakehian

Our revision of Marthamycetales (Leotiomycetes) is

16-09-2025 12:53

Philippe PELLICIER

Pézizes de 1-4 mm, brun grisâtres, sur les capsu

03-09-2025 12:44

Enrique Rubio Enrique Rubio

Hi to somebody.I would like to know your opinion o

15-09-2025 14:40

Nicolas VAN VOOREN Nicolas VAN VOOREN

Hello.I'm searching for a digital copy of the seco

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Pithya
Malcolm Greaves, 29-01-2013 13:26
Malcolm  GreavesThis was found on Picea. With the apothecia up to 10mm and round spores 10 um and swollen paraphyses it looks to fit well with Pithya vulgaris.
This is shown as extinct in the UK so can anyone help?
Thanks
Malcolm
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Nick Aplin, 29-01-2013 14:33
Re : Pithya
Hi Mal,

I have recieved a sample of the same today, from Yorkshire. Where were yours collected from?

I have slightly larger spores 11.5 -12 µm

I'm sure it's P.vulgaris, and was about to send a specimen to Chris Yeates.

Cheers,
Nick

Malcolm Greaves, 29-01-2013 15:06
Malcolm  Greaves
Re : Pithya
Nick
So you were the person "down south" who was also going to look at it. Yes it is from Yorkshire. I was so excited at the possibility of it being Pithya that I put it on here asap and I have since looked at the spores in more detail from a "drop" and yes the average is towards 12 µm?.
Mal

Nick Aplin, 29-01-2013 15:24
Re : Pithya
Hi Mal,

Yes that sounds like me -So we're both looking at the same collection!

Cheers,
Nick
Malcolm Greaves, 29-01-2013 16:02
Malcolm  Greaves
Re : Pithya
Here's a better picture of the spores.
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Nicolas VAN VOOREN, 29-01-2013 18:55
Nicolas VAN VOOREN
Re : Pithya
Hello, good evening.
It looks like Pithya vulgaris but the spore size is a bit smaller than my own collections (13-16 µm Ø). Maybe your collection is not enough mature.
The habitat on dead branches of Abies (probably also on Picea abies) is typical.
Malcolm Greaves, 30-01-2013 00:38
Malcolm  Greaves
Re : Pithya
Nicholas
After seing your comments I selected one of the more mature specimens for a spore drop and the spores were a little bigger. (The second symmetrical? group of spores) and they ranged from 12.3 - 13.1 µm?. With a search of lots more the largest I could find was 14 µm?
Mal
Thomas Læssøe, 10-01-2017 09:50
Re : Pithya
I believe the picture indicates Abies as the host and not Picea.
Lothar Krieglsteiner, 10-01-2017 10:41
Lothar Krieglsteiner
Re : Pithya vulgaris on Abies

.. yes, the substrate does not look like Picea but like Abies.


I am livng in an area with natural Abies-stands. Since decades I am looking for Pithya vulgaris but never found it (and not in the Alps, the Black Forest, the BAvarian Forest, Croatia, ...).


A friend of mine (B. Fellmann) told me about a collection of P. vulgaris on an Abies log that was used as a Christmas tree and thrown away.


What, Mal, are the circumstances of your find?


Best regards from Lothar

Chris Yeates, 10-01-2017 19:01
Malcolm Greaves, 10-01-2017 21:38
Malcolm  Greaves
Re : Pithya
Lothar
Yes these were first found in an area used as a dump for discarded Chrismas trees. It has since been found on various local trees including Pseudotsuga menziesii so it has obviously found a new home.
Mal
Lothar Krieglsteiner, 10-01-2017 21:55
Lothar Krieglsteiner
Re : Pithya
Hello Mal,
thank you very much for the information. It seems to be hopeful to look at similar places.
My friends, Heinz Holzer and Bernd Fellmann, have observed the species near Munich (Germany) on a thrown-away Christmas tree in a city-near forest. This was published in Mycologia Bavarica 8 (only picture on top) and 10 (paper by Dieter Benkert). Unfortunately, in this paper it wasn`t mentioned that the find was done on a Christmas tree (and not a lot at all about ecology ...)
Best regards, 
Lothar
Thomas Læssøe, 11-01-2017 09:31
Re : Pithya
The species is very common here in rather young but also older Abies plantations (many of these trees or cuttings from them) are later exported to Germany around December time :-).
Here it also seems to have jumped to even more exotic conifers a couple of times (but in places with lots of infected Abies).
Do any of you know about phylogentic studies looking at juniperina as well?

cheers
Till Lohmeyer, 11-01-2017 16:31
Re : Pithya
Hallo, Lothar,


stimmt, expressis verbis war der Weihnachtsbaum nicht erwähnt, aber immerhin heißt es dort (Bd. 8, Innendeckel vorne): "an Zweigen einer im Wald entsorgten Ziertanne". Das ist eine bekenntnisneutrale Interpretation, die z. B. auch eine entsorgte Gartentanne ohne Lametta nicht ausschließt ... ;-)

Gruß, Till

Lothar Krieglsteiner, 11-01-2017 17:25
Lothar Krieglsteiner
Re : Pithya

Hallo Till,


entweder war es Heinz oder es war Bernd, der zu mir von einem Weihnachtsbaum sprach. Aber Du hast natürlich recht: die Herren waren nicht dabei, als der Baum mit Lametta behängt wurde - oder auch nicht :-)


Herzliche Grüße von Lothar