Dasyscyphus pini (Brunch.) G.G. Hahn & Ayers
no common name
Lachnaceae

Species account author: Ian Gibson.
Extracted from Matchmaker: Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest.

Introduction to the Macrofungi

Photograph

Once images have been obtained, photographs of this taxon will be displayed in this window.Click on the image to enter our photo gallery.
Currently no image is available for this taxon.


Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Dasyscyphus pini
Click here to view the full interactive map and legend

Species Information

Summary:
Features include tiny bright orange cup-shaped to disc-shaped fruitbodies with cinnamon hairs on the margin and exterior, distinct stem, gregarious occurrence on resinous cankers of 5-needled pines, and microscopic characters. Most Dasyscyphus species in the Pacific Northwest have current names in Lachnum or Lachnellula, but the current name for this one remains Dasyscyphus pini (the online Species Fungorum, and MycoBank, both accessed June 14, 2016).
Microscopic:
spores 13.0-22.0 x 4.4-7.0 microns, commonly 15-20 x 5-6 microns, elongate elliptic, straight, occasionally pyriform [pear-shaped], with one apex obtuse, the other tapering to a subacute or acute end, uniseriate, "unicellular, commonly becoming bicellular on germination, two or three septa, however, may be laid down"; asci 8-spored, (70)88.4-123.4 x 7.2-11.8 microns; paraphyses 1.5-2 microns wide, of equal diameter without swelling at tip, filamentous, protruding beyond asci, with yellowish oil droplets, septate, branched at base; hairs "simple, elongate, septate with short cells, moderately scabrous with minute roughenings, microscopically pale olive-buff, concolorous, longest hairs filiform, tapering, attenuate with exceedingly slender acuminate apices, 1-2 microns broad, extremities of shorter cylindrical hairs, subacute or obtusely rounded, 3-4 microns wide [using mu symbol for microns]"
Notes:
Collections examined from BC, WA, ID, MT, and MI, and reported from Norway and Sweden, (Hahn).

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Lachnellula fuscosanguinea (Rehm) Dennis (=Dasyscyphus fuscosanguineus Rehm) is similar, and D. pini was recombined by Dennis as Lachnellula pini. There is debate about whether the two are one species and whether L. fuscosanguinea occurs in North America. Desjardin(6) reported the latter from California but it is not known whether they distinguish Dasyscyphus pini. They were maintained separately in the online Species Fungorum, accessed June 14, 2016. Hahn(1) regard Dasyscyphus fuscosanguineus as a saprophytic fungus occurring on pine in highlands of central Europe and say that whether it occurs in North America is problematic. According to W.W. Diehl, D. pini differs from D. fuscosanguineus in having definitely branched paraphyses, not thickened at the apex, spores that are often biseptate, and larger asci and spores. (Hahn(1)). Lachnellula arida (W. Phillips) Dennis has smaller spores and asci, and paraphyses with swollen tips, (W.W. Diehl in Hahn(1)).
Habitat
fruitbodies "separate or aggregate, occurring abundantly on resinous cankers" of 5-needled pines (parasitic on them): Western White Pine (Pinus monticola), Eastern White Pine (Pinus strobus), Whitebark Pine (Pinus albicaulis), and in Europe on the 2-needled Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris); in the Pacific Northwest it grows at upper elevations

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Cudoniella aquatica (Lib.) Sacc.