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25-04-2016 18:30

Chris Yeates Chris Yeates

Bonjour tousAesculus hippocastanum (certainly in t

26-04-2016 18:34

Dragiša Savic

I need a description of Pirottaea imbricata. Does

26-04-2016 21:59

Lepista Zacarias

Hi everyone,I saw this pyreno growing on an hera-l

26-04-2016 16:10

ACAR ismail ACAR ismail

hi allon soil in the stump of populus sp.ascospore

25-04-2016 09:18

Steve Clements

Bonjour, j'ai trouvé cet asco sur le bouleau –

20-04-2016 23:02

Bernard CLESSE Bernard CLESSE

En pessière, sur sol argileux ± neutre. a) long

24-04-2016 08:58

Stephen Martin Stephen Martin

Dear friends, I have found an Albugo sp. on Convol

25-04-2016 09:34

Steve Clements

Bonjour. Je ne suis pas sûr à 100% sur ce hyphom

25-04-2016 00:13

Rubén Martínez-Gil Rubén Martínez-Gil

Hola a todos. Subo unas fotos de un asco que enco

24-04-2016 11:41

Steve Clements

Bonjour,On a trouvé un petit Asco sur une clé de

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Puzzling pyreno
Chris Yeates, 25-04-2016 18:30
Chris YeatesBonjour tous
Aesculus hippocastanum (certainly in the UK) appears to have very few 'specialist fungi'. Ellis and Ellis has only four species as direct associates (although Erysiphe flexuosa has arrived since then and is spreading rapidly). Perhaps the situation is the same across Europe - ASCOFrance has only two records with Aesculus as an associate in "la Base de données"

I recently collected a pyrenomycete growing on dead attached twigs and branches of a young Aesculus hippocastanum tree. The perithecia occur extensively, immersed, mostly in ones or groups of 2 (rarely more), and appear to be restricted to the bark.
Asci are long-cylindrical, J-, with uniseriate spores (reminiscent of Phomatospora). The spores are ellipsoid, non-septate and have two large guttules (again somewhat reminiscent of Phomatospora); they measure 8.5-9.2 x 3.4-4µm.

The big surprise for me came when I examined the spores (living in water) under oil immersion at x1000 and saw that they have distinctly verrucose walls, such as one might expect in operculates. I am struggling to think of an order, let alone a genus, in which to place this collection.

Any suggestions would be very welcome.

Cordialement
Chris
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Nick Aplin, 28-04-2016 00:12
Re : Puzzling pyreno
Salut Chris,

Hope all is well up there in Yorkshire.

I have little idea about the identity of your fungus, but I collected something quite similar in 2013 on dead, attached branches of Rhododendron ferrugineum in West Sussex.

The ascospores of my collection measured 8.2-9.4 x 3.4-4.1µm, pretty much identical to yours. My ascospore walls were also verrucose, although apparently slightly less so (or does DIC make it more obvious?)

It seems I didn't keep a specimen, and 'C.f. Phomatospora sp.' is apparently as far as I got with the ID but I'd be interested to hear if you get any further with this puzzle!

Best wishes,
Nick

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