29-11-2024 21:47
Yanick BOULANGERBonjourJ'avais un deuxième échantillon moins mat
27-02-2026 17:51
Michel Hairaud
Bonjour, Quelqu'un peut il me donner un conseil p
27-02-2026 16:17
Mathias Hass
Hi, Found this on Betula, rather fresh fallen twi
27-02-2026 12:56
Åge OterhalsFound on fallen cones of Pinus sylvestris in midle
27-02-2026 11:21
Yannick Mourgues
Hi to all. Here is a specie that can may be relat
26-02-2026 15:00
Me mandan el material seco de Galicia, recolectada
Hymenocyphus or Rutstroemia
Pavel Jiracek,
08-10-2024 13:44
On a piece of unidentified wood (Alnus, Crataegus?), Central Scotland.
Spores 16x5, asci 130-140x10-11
Fruit bodies up to 8 mm across.
Thanks
Hans-Otto Baral,
08-10-2024 17:37
Re : Hymenocyphus or Rutstroemia
Clearly a Hymenoscyphus, and it looks much like the common H. subferrugineus.
Pavel Jiracek,
08-10-2024 18:20
Re : Hymenocyphus or Rutstroemia
Thanks, Hans-Otto,
Can you, please, share what made you identify it? Macro micro or both?
It is large, 8mm.
Can you, please, share what made you identify it? Macro micro or both?
It is large, 8mm.
Hans-Otto Baral,
09-10-2024 20:25
Re : Hymenocyphus or Rutstroemia
You can look into my folders, I have a folder "Hymenoscyphus calyculus-group".
In a wide sense this is H. calyculus, but I learned by type studies that H. subferrugineus (= Helotium broomei) fits what I often found, whereas H. calyculus remained a very difficult species which I did not see since again a long time.
H. subferrugineus has a bit shorter, more cylidrical (less scutuloid) spores.
My article on this is regrettable still unfinished.
Pavel Jiracek,
09-10-2024 20:34
Re : Hymenocyphus or Rutstroemia
Thank you again. I'll check your folders.




