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23-02-2026 11:22

Thomas Læssøe

https://svampe.databasen.org/observations/10584971

29-11-2024 21:47

Yanick BOULANGER

BonjourJ'avais un deuxième échantillon moins mat

07-02-2023 22:28

Ethan Crenson

Hello friends, On Sunday, in the southern part of

19-02-2026 17:49

Salvador Emilio Jose

Hola buenas tardes!! Necesito ayuda para la ident

09-02-2026 22:01

ruiz Jose

Hola, me paso esta colección en madera de pino, t

19-02-2026 13:50

Margot en Geert Vullings

We found this collection on deciduous wood on 7-2-

19-02-2026 12:01

Castillo Joseba Castillo Joseba

Me mandan el material de Galicia (España), recole

17-02-2026 09:41

Maren Kamke Maren Kamke

Good morning, I found a Diaporthe species on Samb

16-02-2026 21:25

Andreas Millinger Andreas Millinger

Good evening,failed to find an idea for this fungu

08-12-2025 17:37

Lothar Krieglsteiner Lothar Krieglsteiner

20.6.25, on branch of Abies infected and thickened

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Eutypella? on elm
Steve Clements, 24-04-2016 11:41
Bonjour,
On a trouvé un petit Asco sur une clé de l'orme (je crois). Est-il Eutypella?

Found on a stick under a large elm in the Peak District, Derbyshire. Up to 4mm diameter, containing over 20 perithecia with necks. No spores were shed overnight, but large numbers of sickle shaped conidia were deposited on the slide. I couldn't find anything on the piece of bark from which these might have come.
Asci were obtained from the jelly. Thesey were about 50 um long and 7-8 wide, containing 8 spores. It was difficult to tell if the apex turned blue with Lugol as the LED lighting of my microscope is itself blueish. Spores floating freely measured 10-11 x 1.5 (approx). In water, they apppeared hyaline. Also noted were bunches of thread-like paraphyses (?), about 150 long and 3 wide.
Using Ellis and Ellis I keyed it out as Valsa, but there is no radial pattern of the ostioles. In Fungi of Switzerland Eutypella alnifraga bears some resemblance but has brown spores and is with alder. In Peter Thompson Valsa cypri is also superficially similar. Any help with this is appreciated.
Steve
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Paul Cannon, 25-04-2016 00:33
Re : Eutypella? on elm
The conidia are typical of Diatrypaceae, and I can see furrowed ostioles on your image. Why not Eutypella stellulata?
Best wishes
Paul
Steve Clements, 25-04-2016 08:54
Re : Eutypella? on elm
Yes, the diagram in Ellis and Ellis shows perithecia at various levels in the stroma - just like mine. 
Many thanks,
Steve