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06-11-2025 16:50

Rot Bojan

Hello! Yesterday I found a fungus on or near a nee

04-11-2025 14:53

Josep Torres Josep Torres

Hello.Very small, globose, mucronate perithecia, b

05-11-2025 11:33

Pierre Repellin

Bonjpur,J'ai trouvé, sur une hampe florale d'Alli

04-11-2025 09:07

Josep Torres Josep Torres

Hello.A suspected Hymenoscyphus sprouting on a thi

04-11-2025 12:43

Edvin Johannesen Edvin Johannesen

Hi! One more found on old Populus tremula log in O

03-11-2025 21:34

Edvin Johannesen Edvin Johannesen

These tiny (0.4-0.5 mm diam.), whitish, short-stip

03-11-2025 19:41

David Chapados David Chapados

Hi,Does anyone knows which genus could this be? G

28-10-2025 15:37

Carl Farmer

I'd be grateful for any suggestions for this strik

03-11-2025 16:30

Hans-Otto Baral Hans-Otto Baral

Hello I want to ask you if you have found this ye

01-11-2025 09:14

Francis Maggi

Bonjour,Trouvé sur Xanthoria parietina à Valdebl

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Sporormiella
Vivien Hodge, 24-11-2016 13:02
Hello everyone

I have found a Sporormiella on sheep (Ovis aries) pellets with small, narrow spores that does not conform to any species that I can find in available literature on dung fungi, e.g. Doveri, Fungi Fimicoli Italici.


Location: Sussex Prairie Gardens, Henfield, West Sussex, England, OS grid ref. TQ23051795. Pellets collected from sheep 7 October 2016 and incubated in moist containers. Pericethicia examined on 9 November 2016.


The perithecia are immersed with just the necks protruding, the necks are relatively long, black and shiny with an ostiole, the perithecium is greyish, slightly translucent, typical Sordariales. Older perithecia have so many ejected spores clustered around them that the necks are not visible, as per photo of single perithecium.


Asci: 85 x 7.5?, long stem, mostly with large bifurcate foot.


Spores: black, three septate, mostly with end cells longer than central ones. Entire spore 16-17.5 x 2.5-3?, central cells 3.75 x 3?, end cells 5 x 2.5?. Longitudinal germ slits present but difficult to see.


A few spores broke up within the asci but mostly they were ejected in one bundle within some gel before separating.


I have been in contact with Mike Richardson and he advised me that he recorded a similar Sporormiella in Puerto Rico in 2001 and in St Lucia in 2004, on cattle and goat dung respectively, however, the species was not named.


Does anyone know of a Sporormiella with small, narrow spores fitting the above description, or know of anyone working on this genus?


Thank you
Vivien

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Michel Delpont, 24-11-2016 14:20
Michel Delpont
Re : Sporormiella
Hello Vivien.

Sporormiella minutisperma can be blamed for your find, but it is often difficult to decide because many species are often variable. I enclose the corresponding article published by F.Doveri and B.Coué.


Michel.

Vivien Hodge, 24-11-2016 16:21
Re : Sporormiella
Hello Michel

Thank you very much for the reply and for the article. I am sure you are right, the description of S. minutisperma in the article by D F.Doveri and B.Coué is a perfect match. 

Best wishes
Vivien