28-04-2026 20:07
Lothar Krieglsteiner
... on twig in the air at standing Ceratonia siliq
14-04-2026 05:32
Ethan CrensonHi all, A few weeks back a friend pointed out som
28-04-2026 20:33
Vitus SchäfftleinHello, I found Trochila ilicina on Ilex aquifoliu
30-04-2026 10:28
Rot BojanHello, by appearance I would say that I am dealing
27-04-2026 18:48
Tony MoverleyCollected 23rd April 2026, Norfolk, EnglandSwarms
27-04-2026 20:52
Lothar Krieglsteiner
Found on hanging tiwg of Olea europaea in dried-ou
28-04-2026 22:51
Bernard CLESSE
Bonsoir à toutes et tous,Pourriez-vous m'aider à
29-04-2026 08:01
Lothar Krieglsteiner
... on twig attached to small tree of Citrus auran
29-04-2026 10:44
Lothar Krieglsteiner
growing at moist, drying-out soil at the side of a
on a trouvé cet Orbilia sur le bois de bouleau. Les petits et grands ascocarpes, tous les deux, avaient les mêmes caractéristiques microscopiques.
Hi,
We found this Orbilia growing with Mollisia-type ascos on a birch log. Both the glassy-looking small ascocarps and the larger opaque ones had the same microscopy. The ascocarps were small (up to 0.65 mm) and large (up to 2.2 mm).
Paraphyses had swollen heads up to 3.5 um wide.
Asci were 35-45 x 3-4.
In my books I was unable to find a bright yellow Orbilia with spores of these dimensions ie 7-8.5 x 2-2.5.
Steve
Hello Steve,
I think you give pictures of two different discomycetes. The spores you measured are not from an Orbilia (maybe a Hymenoscyphus or Bisporella, as the macrofotos look like), but the next picture with the asci is. In this asci I see minute roundish spores, and I think this is what was earlier determined as Orbilia coccinella (s.l.). Zotto surely knows more, but this for the moment.
Regards from Lothar
I even think it is O. xanthostigma with reniform warted spores
Zotto
Zotto was right - the small one is Orbilia xanthostigma - and so is the large yellow one. Over 10 days they have both developed mature knobbly reniform spores. It's a very big Orbilia at 2.2 mm!
The spores which confused me were from the nearby Mollisia type asco.
That was a real mystery,
Thanks,
Steve









