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21-01-2026 19:55

Bohan Jia

Hi,  Could this be Nemania aureolutea? Or did I

21-01-2026 16:32

Gernot Friebes

Hi,I need your help with some black dots on a lich

21-01-2026 16:48

Gernot Friebes

Hi,after my last unknown hyphomycete on this subst

20-01-2026 17:49

Hardware Tony Hardware Tony

I offer this collection as a possibility only as e

15-01-2026 15:55

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

this one is especially interesting for me because

03-01-2026 15:36

éric ROMERO éric ROMERO

Bonjour, Pouvez-vous me dire quel est le nom à p

19-01-2026 12:01

Castillo Joseba Castillo Joseba

Me mandan el material seco de Galicia (España) 

17-01-2026 19:35

Arnold Büschlen

Hallo, ich suche zu Cosmospora aurantiicola Lite

16-01-2026 00:45

Ethan Crenson

Hi all, On decorticated hardwood from a New York

18-01-2026 12:24

Josep Torres Josep Torres

Hello.An anamorph located on the surface of a thin

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Aquatic Pleosporales (Lentithecium?)
Ibai Olariaga Ibarguren, 11-06-2015 19:09

Hi!

I was wondering if someone could help with this aquatic fungus, found on a deciduous branch in a stream in Sweden. Perithecia immersed, elongated, with a more or less elongated neck. It has two-celled spores, hyaline when they are inside the asci, but brown, 4-celled and finely warty when senescent, 24-28 x 9-10 µm. Hamathecial filaments are cylindrical as well. The photos I send are taken from dead material.


Looking at the available literature I have, I wonder if it might conform to Lentithecium fluviatile, but the spores did not have any sheath when I looked at it fresh (I only used water) and the perithecia seem more elongated like in some Lophiotrema. Any other possibility?


Thank you in advance!


Cheers,


Ibai.

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Yannick Mourgues, 13-06-2015 21:09
Yannick Mourgues
Re : Aquatic Pleosporales (Lentithecium?)
Hello.
It reminds me more L. aquaticum then L. fluviatile.
The wood around ascomata seems to be dark-grey colored. Spores dimensions fits well : 25-30x8-12um in Zhang & Co. : http://www.fungaldiversity.org/fdp/sfdp/FD38-13.pdf
They are broadly fusiform with rounded ends, hyaline, 2-celled and four celled with age, constricted at the septum, they should have four refractive guttules before beeing dried.
You should check the presence or not of gel sheat in Indian ink. Not easy to see. Impossible to see in water only, I think.
We have here in France many recolts of Lentithecium cf. aquaticum lacking sheat around spores. Is it possible for you to send me a part of your recolt ?
Yannick
Ibai Olariaga Ibarguren, 16-06-2015 08:23
Re : Aquatic Pleosporales (Lentithecium?)

Thank you Yannick!

I meant in fact aquaticum, that was my conclusion but I then switched the names. You are right, the spores had 4 guttules when alive and the wood was grey tinged (but I see that colour often when I collect on wood pieces in streams).

Sure, I will try to make the material available to you. I will email you privately.

Cheers,

Ibai.



Jacques Fournier, 26-06-2015 14:58
Jacques Fournier
Re : Aquatic Pleosporales (Lentithecium?)
Hi Ibai,
clearly L. aquaticum. The sheath around the ascospores is most often visible in water but it stains readily in aqueous nigrosin (photo attached).
The brown verrucose senescent ascospores are rarely encountered and may be misleading.
Cheers,
Jacques
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