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24-04-2026 03:16

David Chapados David Chapados

Found while looking at something else from wood in

22-04-2026 20:54

Enrique Rubio Enrique Rubio

Hi to everybody.This Pyrenopeziza grew in moist le

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Richard VALERI Richard VALERI

Bonjour à tous.Je vous présente cette Nectria s.

22-04-2026 20:17

Marian Jagers Marian Jagers

Is anyone familiar with the Hyphomycetes genus Pse

23-04-2026 06:46

François Freléchoux François Freléchoux

Bonjour, Voici la description d'un minuscule asco

21-04-2026 22:14

Margot en Geert Vullings

This cup fungus was found on April 10, 2026, on lo

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Louis DENY

Bonjour forum.Trouvé à Belfort, est de la France

21-04-2026 21:00

Sylvie Le Goff

Bonjour à tousJe sollicite votre aide pour cet as

21-04-2026 13:36

Gernot Friebes

Hi,I am out of ideas for this one. I collected Sal

21-04-2026 13:19

Gernot Friebes

Hi,this Lophodermium on Typha has ascospores measu

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Lachnum subvirgineum
Miguel Ángel Ribes, 11-03-2009 00:00
Miguel Ãngel RibesBuenas noches

Tengo varias recolecciones de Lachnum virgineum (http://www.micobotanicajaen.com/Revista/Articulos/Fichas/Fichas008/LachnumVirgineum.htm), pero en esta ocasión la microscopía es algo distinta, sobre todo en cuanto a las puntas de los pelos, que son bastante engrosados, y he pensado que podría tratarse de Lachnum subvirgineum. Recolectado en Tenerife (Islas Canarias) en bosque "Monteverde": laurel (Laurus novocanariensis)y brezo (Erica arborea). Ver pdf adjunto.

Gracias,
____________________________________________
Good night

I have several records of Lachnum virgineum (http://www.micobotanicajaen.com/Revista/Articulos/Fichas/Fichas008/LachnumVirgineum.htm), but this one has a little different microscopial characters, because it has a clavate tips hairs. I think it could be Lachnum subvirgineum. Record from Tenerife (Canary Islands), in "Monteverde" forest: laurel (Laurus novocanariensis) and brezo (Erica arborea). See attached pdf file.

Thank you,
  • message #7043
Hans-Otto Baral, 11-03-2009 23:25
Hans-Otto Baral
Re:Lachnum subvirgineum
Dear Miguel

yes, I believe this is L. subvirgineum. Why do you write that croziers are also absent? I see very well the croziers in most of your images. The hairs are also shorter in L: subvirgineum compared to L. virgineum. Do you have no possibility to study your specimens when fresh? The micros are all in dead state, and therefore you loose the VBs which are characteristic of quite a lot of Lachnum species.

Zotto
Miguel Ángel Ribes, 12-03-2009 14:33
Miguel Ãngel Ribes
Re:Lachnum subvirgineum
Dear Zotto, thank you very much.

Sorry, but, where have you read that "croziers are also absent"? At the second photo in the attached pdf I say "with croziers (right)". I can't find that text.

I used to stay at Tenerife during a week-nine days in June and another week-nine days in December, and I try to come back with a lot of fresh material, but the first days material is difficult to mantein in good condition. Another times I bring the funghi in fresh conditions but I have no time to process all of fresh material, like this L. subvirgineum, because I though it would be L. virgineum again, so perhaps I took more attention to other species before this. Sorry.

Thank you again


Hans-Otto Baral, 12-03-2009 18:34
Hans-Otto Baral
Re:Lachnum subvirgineum
Dear Miguel

sorry, I must have been overworked yesterday. Now everything is o.k. :-)

I understand of course the problem with fresh specimens from far away. When I see the fresh macro I think why is the micro so dead. But now I see there are some weeks between. My collections from Tenerife from about 1978 are largely still unexamined :-(

Zotto