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05-09-2019 20:40

Ethan Crenson

Found by a friend last weekend in a New York City

05-09-2019 18:09

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:09

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:11

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:11

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:11

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:11

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:10

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:10

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

05-09-2019 18:10

Tanja Böhning Tanja Böhning

Hello from NMC in Norway,Today I found a very very

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Hymenoscyphus ?
Ethan Crenson, 05-09-2019 20:40
Found by a friend last weekend in a New York City park. Growing in a small creek on what could be a twig of hardwood, or the stem of a leaf, or perhaps some other kind of stem.  I think this is Hymenoscyphus.  The fruiting bodies are waxy, stipitate, perhaps 1mm tall and 1mm in diameter at the most.  Asci are 80-82 x 8-9µm IKI+.  Spores are hyaline, fusiform, sometimes with one end rounded and the other pointed, guttulate, measuring around 19-20 x 4.5-5µm.  Paraphyses are vermiform, not enlarged at the ends for the most part. Is this Hymenoscyphus?  Maybe Hymenoscyphus caudatus? 

Thank you in advance.

Ethan
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Hans-Otto Baral, 05-09-2019 20:49
Hans-Otto Baral
Re : Hymenoscyphus ?
This looks clearly like a petiole. The blackening of the substrate points to H. albidus, but I am unaware of this species occurring in America.

H. caudatus is an aggregate. Helpful is to clarify whether the asci arise from croziers or simple septa. Also I am not sure about the VBs in the living paraphyses,m are they strongly refrcative like oil drops?

Since the closeup shows apos on a rather undarkened petiole, I am not fully sure they are the same as the others.

Zotto
Ethan Crenson, 05-09-2019 21:03
Re : Hymenoscyphus ?
I am almost completely certain that the petiole in the in situ photos and the one from my dissecting microscope photos are one and the same.  I assumed that the color shift in both the fungi and the petiole was due to them drying out in my refrigerator for 5 days.  I will attempt to get better documentation of the base of the asci.  Zotto, apologies, but could you explain for me what VBs is an abbreviation for?  Thank you.

Ethan
Hans-Otto Baral, 05-09-2019 21:56
Hans-Otto Baral
Re : Hymenoscyphus ?
VBs are refravtive vacuolar bodies. They look like oil drops (lipid bodies, LBs) but unlike LBs they disappear in KOH or when pressing on the cover slip.
Martin Bemmann, 05-09-2019 22:11
Martin Bemmann
Re : Hymenoscyphus ?
And this (red arrow in the attachment) is a Fraxinus samara (seed).

Most probably Fraxinus nigra, if we look for North American species:


Regards

Martin
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