Habitat and Range
Morchella tridentina, the mountain blond morel (PS E), also occurs away from fires and has the ribs separating the pits lighter in color (ivory to nearly white) than the lining of the pits when old. By maturity the ribs are off-white sometimes with amber stains and bruises. Pits are gray when very young, becoming tan, golden, or straw yellow when mature. It differs from most descriptions of M. esculenta from Europe or elsewhere in North America in that 1) it has a relatively narrow head, rather than oval or rounded, especially in young specimens, 2) "the primary ribs are strongly vertical and relatively straight producing elongated pits rather than the rounded to somewhat irregular pits generally attributed to M. esculenta [Latin name in italics]", and 3) it "seems to be characteristic of conifer forests including either lodgepole or ponderosa pine, whereas the complex centered on M. esculenta [Latin name in italics] is commonly associated with hardwoods sometimes mixed with conifers." (Pilz). Kuo (2006) calls M. tridentina (as M. frustrata) the western blond morel "to reflect the fact that the Western Blond is found not only under conifers at high elevations but also under hardwoods at lower elevations". The colors, he says, suggest a yellow morel, since the ridges do not darken with age and the overall color of the cap is fairly pale throughout development--though the mature cap colors are just a little bit browner than the colors of the typical yellow morel. The stature of the Western Blond, however, ''suggests a black morel; the pits and ridges are more vertically arranged than those of the esculenta-like yellow morels, and the cap attaches to the stem with a shallow "rim"--a feature not usually found with yellow morels.'' (Kuo(2)). Morchella prava (known from BC, OR, ON, SK, MT, and SD and reported from WA) is distinguished by dark pits and a very contorted head, (M. Beug, pers. comm.). M. prava "usually can be identified on the basis of its esculenta-like stature and its contorted, asymmetrical and irregular pits and ridges. The pits are highly irregular in outline and size, and the thick, bluntly rounded ridges are less likely to become eroded and sharpened with maturity than the ridges in M. esculentoides"; the cap "often appears like a contorted or somewhat deformed version" of the M. esculentoides cap. Significant microscopic differences from M. esculentoides were not observed although the elements on sterile ridges in specimens studied generally were sparsely scattered or nearly absent, whereas they were easily located in M. esculentoides. (Kuo(6) with the Latin italicized). M. prava is one of three species that has been known in the past by the name Morchella deliciosa, commonly found in field guides. Morchella deliciosa refers to a European morel described by Fries. It was described for North America by Weber in 1995 and documented for eastern North America. Kuo(6) do not recognize M. deliciosa of Europe for North America and describe three eastern North American species that have been considered as M. deliciosa in the past, one of them being M. prava. According to Kuo (1), the mushrooms are small in comparison to the classic North American yellow morels [i.e. to what are later called M. esculentoides], and the pits and ridges are sparser proportionally and more vertically arranged. Additionally the caps are frequently but not always more pointed. (Kuo(1)). What has passed for Morchella deliciosa in California is thought to be Morchella rufobrunnea (the blushing morel), described from Mexico in 1998. The trademark physical features of Morchella rufobrunnea, according to Kuo(2) are the frequently pointed cap (especially when young), the striking contrast of the light-colored, vertically arranged ridges and darker pits in young mushrooms, and the fact that it is rufescent, meaning that it blushes pinkish to salmon oRANGE when bruised, especially when young.in western North America "under hardwoods in river bottoms or in urban settings in association with apple trees or ornamental ash plantings", in the east of North America common, often found under living and dead hardwoods, especially living Fraxinus americana (White Ash) and dead or dying Ulmus americana (American Elm), and occasionally in association with conifers; fruiting in spring, (Kuo(6)), single to gregarious or clustered, "in a wide variety of habitats, including hardwood forests", "under mature to old fruit trees (especially apples), around dead American elms, under white pines, on sand dunes and many other places", (Weber), M. claviformis under Acer (maple), and M. populina under Populus (cottonwood etc.) are considered synonyms (Richard(1)), in North America it is found "in a variety of habitats, often associated with white ash but also found near dead elms, in old apple orchards, riparian areas, burned areas, or mixed hardwood forests, sometimes under conifers, often on steep slopes or along old railroad beds", in spring and early summer, (Beug(3))