10-07-2015 18:21
Please see the attached pdf file. The host is an i
14-07-2015 15:21
Roland LabbéBonjour !Voici un Brunnipila clandestina probable.
14-07-2015 11:38
Marja PennanenHello,these strange for me discs are about 0,1-0,2
10-07-2015 19:34
Joaquin MartinHolaOrbilia encontrada en bosque de ribera, sobre
12-07-2015 22:37
Salvador TelloHola a todos, siempre me surgen dudas de que serí
07-07-2015 13:30
Gernot FriebesHi, here is the second fungus. Again a short descr
12-07-2015 11:11
En madera de Rosacea (melocotonero)Mer parecio por
12-07-2015 21:45
Marcus YeoThis fungus was growing on dead stems of Sedum (Rh
11-07-2015 16:54
Marja PennanenHello,once again Raitviirs study gave me no answer
i would consider h. monticola as a possibility. its typical in river banks. i've found it often together with vibrissea-species ...
best
dirk
Hi Dirk. I don't know Hymenoscyphus/Phaehelotium monticola but the pattern of the spore guttulation seems to be different for this species with two big Lbs, isn't?
Thanks
Moreover, Ph. monticola has paraphyses with less refractive vacuoles into my opinion. This Phaeohelotium is unknown to me.
Bernard
I don't want to be a neg but the apical ring in your plate does not look like a hymenoscyphus type to me, more the calycina type with the protruding top which could lead to complete different directions
Perhaps Z. comes by and has a idea about the species.
best wishes,
Stip
just now I saw this posting, because our email account is presently blocked (the whole yesterday and with unclear future). Anybody writing me might use our alternative zottoevi@gmail.com.
My first idea was the group around Phaeohelotium fulvidulum. But the typical species is without croziers, so excluded. I have three deviating taxa as separate folders, and particularly my griseobrunneus would be an option because of the colour. But the spores are too long there, no overlap.
Stip's objection about the apical ring is right, but in P. fulvidulum such a ring may also occur, see for instance my drawing Hymenoscyphus fulvidulus, HB 5572b.JPG. So I think a Phaeohelotium would be the correct genus.
Zotto
Monasterio-de-Hermo-0001.pdf