Coal Ball Mushroom
Coal Ball Mushroom | ||||||||||||
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Coal ball mushroom ( Daldinia concentrica ) |
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Systematics | ||||||||||||
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Scientific name | ||||||||||||
Daldinia concentrica | ||||||||||||
(Bolton: Fr.) Cesati & de Notaris |
The coal ball mushroom ( Daldinia concentrica ) is a wood-dwelling fungus from the family of the wooden club relatives .
features
The fruiting bodies are spherical to bulbous and are 2 to 5 cm in size. At first they are gray-brown and superficially as if they are dusted by the conidiospores and then become red-brown and finally black. The surface is finely humped in this last stage, since the perithecia are located here. The interior of the stroma is woody-charcoal and zoned concentrically, which explains the name. The spore powder is black with elliptical to bean-shaped spores that have a fissure. They are smooth and 13–16 × 7–9 μm in size.
ecology
The coal ball mushroom is a saprobiontic inhabitant of dead, barked branches and trunks of hardwood such as B. beech , oak , alder and birch . It is found in the conidia form all year round, especially in riparian forests and alder swamps with suitable substrates, but it is quite rare. In autumn it is spore-ripe.
Food value
The coal ball mushroom is inedible.
Systematics
In Central Europe there is a second species, Daldinia vernicosa . This has gelatinized trama, slightly smaller spores and stalked fruiting bodies. Otherwise the coal ball mushroom is well characterized by its zoning. There have recently been efforts to split the coal ball mushroom into several types.
swell
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b E. Gerhardt: FSVO manual mushrooms. FSVO, 1995.
- ↑ Reconsideration of Daldinia concentrica based upon a recently discovered specimen on mycology.sinica.edu.tw
literature
- A. Bollmann, A. Gminder, P. Reil: List of illustrations of large European mushrooms. 4th edition. Genre CD, Black Forest Mushroom Teaching Show, Hornberg 2007, ISSN 0932-920X
- Heinrich Dörfelt , Gottfried Jetschke (Ed.): Dictionary of mycology. 2nd Edition. Spectrum Academic Publishing House, Heidelberg / Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-8274-0920-9 .
- Josef Breitenbach, Fred Kränzlin (Ed.): Mushrooms of Switzerland. Contribution to knowledge of the fungal flora in Switzerland. Volume 1: Ascomycetes (Ascomycetes). 2nd, corrected edition. Mykologia, Luzern 1984, ISBN 3-85604-011-0 .