Athelia teutoburgensis
Athelia teutoburgensis | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Systematics | ||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Scientific name | ||||||||||||
Athelia teutoburgensis | ||||||||||||
( Brinkmann ) Jülich |
Athelia teutoburgensis is a stand mushroom art from the family of the tissue skin relatives (Atheliaceae). It forms resupinate, whitish and moldy carpet-like fruiting bodies on French tamarisks . The known distribution of the species includes Europe from the Atlantic to the Caucasus .
features
Macroscopic features
Athelia teutoburgensis , like all species from the genus of the tissue membrane ( Athelia ), forms whitish to yellowish, thin fruiting bodies with a smooth hymenium and inconspicuous to fibrous edges. They are resupinate, that is, they lie directly on the substrate, and can easily be removed from it.
Microscopic features
Athelia teutoburgensis has a monomitic hyphae structure that is typical of tissue membranes , that is, it only has generative hyphae that serve the growth of the fruiting body. The hyphae are hyaline , and the basal hyphae are thick-walled. Some of them have buckles . The species does not have cystidia . Your basidia are hyaline, club-shaped, 7.8–9.6 µm wide and club-shaped. They have four sterigmata . The spores of the fungus are ellipsoidal in shape, 9.6–12 × 4.6–6.2 µm in size, smooth and thin-walled and hyaline.
distribution
The known distribution of Athelia teutoburgensis covers large parts of western, northern and eastern Europe; the Artareal reaches from France to the Caucasus . The species is apparently absent in southern Mediterranean Europe.
ecology
Athelia teutoburgensis is a saprobiont that attacks the French tamarisk ( Tamarix gallica ).
literature
- Annalisa Bernicchia, Sergio Peréz Gorjón: Fungi Europaei. Volume 12: Corticiaceae sl Edizioni Candusso, Alassio 2010. ISBN 978-88-901057-9-1 .