Tulostoma fimbriatum Fr. var. campestre (Morgan) G. Moreno
No common name
Agaricaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

Photograph

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Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Tulostoma fimbriatum
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Species Information

Summary:
Features include 1) small roundish spore-sac on a somewhat striate light-colored stem, 2) spore case with an outer covering that falls off except for a band at its base, 3) ochraceous cream inner case, 4) fibrillose-fringed opening at the top, 5) ochraceous spore mass, 6) growth in sandy soil, and 7) microscopic characters including nearly round to elliptic spores that are minutely punctate under oil immersion. The description is derived from Wright.
Microscopic:
spores 5.3-7 microns in diameter, nearly round to elliptic, colored, minutely punctate under oil immersion, under scanning electron microscope "the ornamentation appears formed by small, even verrucae, some almost squamiform, appressed and hardly at all anastomosed"; capillitium slightly yellowish, branched, septate, threads thick-walled, with visible to solid lumen, hardly at all swollen at the colored scant septa, 5.4-9.4 microns wide
Notes:
Collections were examined from BC, WA, OR, ID, CA, IL, IA, KS, ND, NE, NM, NY, and Argentina, (Wright). The University of Michigan has 2 collections, one submitted by Ellen Trueblood from ID, and the other submitted by Nancy Smith Weber from ID, both determined in 1994 by J. Wright.

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Var. tuberculatum is close to var. fimbriatum of Europe and to Tulostoma pulchellum, but differs from both by its spores, (Wright). The spores of var. campestre have larger verrucae, but "It is probably that the spore ornamentation is only an extreme of the variation observed in T. fimbriatum Fr. var. campestre and it could well qualify as a form of this with small and anastomosed verrucae.", (Wright).
Habitat
sandy soil; recorded in March, April, June, and September, (in northern hemisphere), mostly in March

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Corticium niveocremeum Hoehn. & Litsch.
Paullicorticium niveocremeum (Hoehn. & Litsch.) Oberw.
Peziza emileia Cooke