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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Taxonomy  





2 Description  



2.1  Microscopic characteristics  





2.2  Similar species  







3 Habitat and distribution  





4 References  



4.1  Cited text  
















Mycena adscendens






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Mycena adscendens
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Mycenaceae
Genus: Mycena
Species:
M. adscendens
Binomial name
Mycena adscendens

(Lasch) Maas Geest. (1981)

Synonyms[1]
  • Agaricus adscendens Lasch (1829)
  • Agaricus tenerrimus Berk. (1836)
  • Mycena tenerrima (Berk.) Sacc.
  • Mycena tenerrima (Fr.) Quél. (1874)
  • Prunulus tenerrimus (Berk.) Murrill (1916)
  • Pseudomycena tenerrima (Berk.) Cejp (1930)
  • Mycena adscendens

    View the Mycomorphbox template that generates the following list

    Mycological characteristics

    Gillsonhymenium
    Capisconical
    Hymeniumisfreeoradnexed
    Stipeisbare

    Spore printiswhite
    Ecology is saprotrophic
    Edibility is unknown

    Mycena adscendens, commonly known as the frosty bonnet, is a species of fungus in the family Mycenaceae. The fungus produces small white fruit bodies (mushrooms) with caps up to 7.5 mm (0.3 in) in diameter that appear to be dusted with sugar-like granules. Caps are supported by thin, hollow stems up to 20 mm (0.8 in) long, which are set on a disc-like base. Its distribution includes Europe, Turkey and the Pacific coast of the United States. The fruit bodies grow on fallen twigs and other woody debris on the forest floor, including fallen hazel nuts. The variety carpophila is known from Japan. There are several small white Mycena species that are similar in appearance to M. adscendens, some of which can be reliably distinguished only by examining microscopic characteristics.

    Taxonomy

    [edit]

    The species, originally named Agaricus adscendensbyWilhelm Gottfried Lasch in 1829, was first collected in the Province of Brandenburg, in what was then the Kingdom of Prussia (now Germany).[2] It was Dutch mycologist Maas Geesteranus who assigned the species its current name in a 1981 publication.[3] According to Maas Geesteranus,[3][4] Miles Berkeley's 1836 Agaricus tenerrimus[5] is the same species as Mycena adscendens, as well as all later synonyms based on this basionym: Mycena tenerrima, published by Lucien Quélet in 1872;[6] Prunulus tenerrimusbyWilliam Alphonso Murrill in 1916;[7] and Karel Cejp's 1930 Pseudomycena tenerrima.[8] Although Index Fungorum agrees with Maas Geesteranus's synonymy,[1] other authorities treat the species as independent.[9][10] An additional synonym is Agaricus (Mycena) farinellus, described by Johann Feltgen from Luxembourg in 1906.[3]

    The variety M. adscendens var. carpophila, published by Dennis Desjardin in 1995,[11] was originally proposed as M. tenerrima var. carpophilabyJakob Emanuel Lange in 1914.[12]

    Mycena adscendens is the type speciesofsection Sacchariferae of the genus Mycena, which contains white species with floccose caps (covered with tufts of soft woolly hairs). Other members of this section include M. floccifera, M. discopus, and M. nucicola. The mushroom is commonly known as the "frosty bonnet".[13] The specific epithet adscendens, derived from the Latin, means "ascending" or "curving up from a prostrate base".[14] Tenerrima derives from the Latin tener, meaning "tender" or "delicate".[15]

    Description

    [edit]
    Gills are distantly spaced

    The cap is white and small, with a diameter typically ranging from 2.5 to 7.5 mm (0.1 to 0.3 in). Initially convex to cucullate (hood-shaped), it flattens during maturity, developing visible surface grooves that correspond to the gills underneath the cap; the surface may also be covered with glistening particles, remnants of the partial veil.[16] The cap is pallid gray with a whitish margin when young, but soon becomes white overall. The flesh is membranous, fragile, and thin (less than 0.5 mm). The gills are free from attachment or narrowly attached (adnexed) to the stem.[17] They are up to 0.5 mm broad, distantly-spaced (usually numbering between 7 and 12), and sometimes adhering to each other to form a slight collar (apseudocollarium) around the stem. They are translucent-white throughout their development, with a fringed, white edge.[18] The hollow stem is 0.5 to 2 cm (0.2 to 0.8 in) long, and usually curved and threadlike. The bottom of the stem is enlarged into a slight bulb, which is initially nearly spherical.[17] At the very base of the stem is a small, white, and hairy disk-like base that attaches to the substrate.[19] The edibility of the mushroom is unknown, but like many small Mycenas, they are insubstantial and not likely to be considered for the table.[20]

    The variety carpophila is characterized by its tiny white cap up to 1 mm in diameter, and narrowly conical caulocystidia (cystidia found on the stem).[21]

    Microscopic characteristics

    [edit]

    Mycena adscendens produces a white spore print. The spores are broadly ellipsoid, amyloid, and have dimensions of 8–10 by 5–6.5 μm.[17] Basidia (spore-bearing cells) are two-spored, club-shaped, and measure 14–17 by 7–9 μm.[18] Pleurocystidia (cystidia on the gill faces) may be present or absent. If present, they are similar to the cheilocystidia (cystidia on the gill edges). The cheilocystidia are abundant, measuring 28–44 by 8–12 μm. They are variable in shape, often fusoid-ventricose (fuse-shaped with a swollen center) or with 2–3 needle-like projections arising from the apex; the projections are sometimes forked. The swollen parts of the cheilocystidia are covered with short rodlike protuberances or warts. The flesh of the gills is vinaceous-brown when stainediniodine. The flesh of the cap is made up of greatly enlarged cells, with the surface covered with club-shaped to almost globular cells measuring 25–40 by about 20 μm. Their walls are finely verrucose (covered with small warts), and all but the verrucose cells are vinaceous-brown in iodine.[17] Clamp connections are abundant in the hyphae.[19]

    Similar species

    [edit]
    Mycena stylobates is a robust lookalike of M. adscendens.

    Other Mycenas that resemble M. adscendens include M. alphitophora and M. stylobates. The former is distinguished from M. adscendens by a stem base that is not swollen or disc-like, the latter by its larger and sturdier fruit body and lack of granules on the cap.[20] A poorly known Japanese species, M. cryptomeriicola, is similar to M. adscendens, but has non-amyloid spores and lacks clamps.[22] M. nucicola is most reliably distinguished from M. adscendens by microscopic characteristics: M. nucicola has four-spored basidia, clamp connections are rare in the hyphae of the gill tissue, and the spores are less broad (typically 4.2–5 μm).[11] The Finnish species M. occulta grows on the decaying needles of Norway spruce and Scots pine. It differs from M. adscendens in that its gills do not form a pseudocollarium, it lacks clamps in the hyphae and cells of the hymenium, and the terminal cells in its cap cuticle are densely covered with protuberances.[23]

    Habitat and distribution

    [edit]

    Fruit bodies of Mycena adscendens are found scattered to grouped together in twos or threes on fallen twigs, bark, and woody debris of hardwoods during the spring and autumn;[19] it fruits less frequently on the wood of conifers.[18] Fruitings are most common after periods of wet weather.[20] They are also found growing on hazel nuts that have fallen to the ground; two other Mycenas known to grow on this substrate include M. discopus and M. nucicola.[19] In the United States, it is known from WashingtontoCalifornia.[17] It is also found in Europe,[19] and has been collected in Amasya Province, Turkey.[24] The variety carpophila, originally described from Denmark, was reported from Japan in 2003.[21]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b "Mycena adscendens (Lasch) Maas Geest". Species Fungorum. CAB International. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  • ^ Lasch WG. (1829). "Enumeratio Hymenomycetum pileatorum Marchiae Brandenburgicae, nondum in floris nostratibus nominatorum, cum observationibus in cognitos et novorum descriptionibus". Linnaea (in Latin). 4: 518–53 (see p. 536).
  • ^ a b c Maas Geesteranus RA. (1981). "Studies in Mycenas 16–25". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen. Series C: Biological and Medical Sciences. 84 (2): 211–20.
  • ^ Maas Geesteranus RA. (1982). "Studies in Mycenas 59. Berkeley's fungi referred to Mycena – 1". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen. Series C: Biological and Medical Sciences. 85 (2): 273–85.
  • ^ Berkeley MJ. (1836). "The English Flora, Fungi". 5–2: 61. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • ^ Quélet L. (1872). "Les Champignons du Jura et des Vosges". Mémoires de la Société d'Émulation de Montbéliard. II (in French). 5: 43–332 (see p. 109).
  • ^ Murrill WA. (1916). "Agaricaceae Tribe Agariceae". North American Flora. 9 (5): 297–374 (see p. 322).
  • ^ Cejp K. (1930). "Revise Stredoevropskych Druhu skupiny Omphalia-Mycena II". Spisy Vydávané Přírodovědeckou Fakultou Karlovy University (in Czech). 104: 1–162 (see p. 151).
  • ^ "Mycena tenerrima (Berk.) Quél., Mémoires de la Société d'Émulation de Montbéliard, 5:109, 1872". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  • ^ Bougher N. (2009). "Two intimately co-occurring species of Mycena section Sacchariferae in south-west Australia". Mycotaxon. 108: 169–74. doi:10.5248/108.159.
  • ^ a b Desjardin DE. (1995). Petrini O, Horak E (eds.). A Preliminary Accounting of the Worldwide Members of Mycena sect. Sacchariferae. Taxonomic Monographs of Agaricales. Bibliotheca Mycologica. Berlin, Germany: J. Cramer in der Gebrueder Borntraeger Verlagsbuchhandlung. pp. 56–7.
  • ^ Lange JE. (1914). "Studies in the Agarics of Denmark. Part I. Mycena". Dansk Botanisk Arkiv. 1 (5): 1–40 (see p. 35).
  • ^ "Recommended English Names for Fungi in the UK" (PDF). British Mycological Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-16.
  • ^ Gledhill D. (2008). The Names of Plants. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0-521-86645-3.
  • ^ Arora D. (1986). Mushrooms Demystified: A Comprehensive Guide to the Fleshy Fungi. Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press. p. 911. ISBN 978-0-89815-169-5.
  • ^ Jordan M. (2004). The Encyclopedia of Fungi of Britain and Europe. London, UK: Frances Lincoln. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-7112-2378-3.
  • ^ a b c d e Smith (1947), pp. 45–7.
  • ^ a b c Maas Geesteranus RA. (1983). "Conspectus of the Mycenas of the Northern Hemisphere – 1. Sections Sacchariferae, Basipedes, Bulbosae, Clavulares, Exiguae, and Longisetae". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen. Series C: Biological and Medical Sciences. 86 (3): 401–21.
  • ^ a b c d e Aronsen A. "Mycena adscendens". A key to the Mycenas of Norway. Archived from the original on 2012-10-09. Retrieved 2013-03-05.
  • ^ a b c Wood M, Stevens F. "California Fungi: Mycena adscendens". Archived from the original on 2012-08-12. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
  • ^ a b Tanaka I, Hongo T (2003). "Two new records of Mycena sect. Sacchariferae from Japan and type study of Mycena cryptomeriicola (sect. Sacchariferae)". Mycoscience. 44 (6): 421–4. doi:10.1007/s10267-003-0134-z. S2CID 84778214.
  • ^ Maas Geesteranus RA. (1991). "Studies in Mycenas. Additions and corrections, part 1". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen. Series C: Biological and Medical Sciences. 94 (3): 377–403.
  • ^ Maas Geesteranus RA. (1991). "Studies in Mycenas. Additions and corrections, part 2". Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Academie van Wetenschappen. Series C: Biological and Medical Sciences. 94 (4): 545–71.
  • ^ Aktas S, Ozturk C, Kasik G, Dogan HH (2009). "New records for the Turkish macrofungi from Amasya province". Turkish Journal of Botany. 33 (4): 311–21. doi:10.3906/bot-0802-11.
  • Cited text

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