Summary: Features include tiny, black, shiny, circular or undulate fruitbodies in a stem of pine; stem lacking or rudimentary; the release of a dark pigment when mounted in KOH; and microscopic characters including 1-3-septate, fusoid-elliptic spores.
Claussenomyces pini was described from BC with a voucher at the Pacific Forestry Centre.
Upper surface: apothecia [sexual fruitbodies] 0.02-0.08cm wide, up to 0.04cm high, marginate, circular or undulate; black; shiny
Underside: black
Stem: sessile [without a stem] to substipitate [with a rudimentary stem]
Chemical Reactions: ionomidotic [releasing a dark pigment into aqueous KOH solution]
Microscopic: spores 10-18 x 3 microns, fusoid-elliptic, straight or slightly curved, colorless, 1-3-septate; asci 8-spored, 85-105 x 8-10 microns, clavate, long-stemmed, apex thickened, pore not staining in iodine; paraphyses filiform [thread-like], branching, slightly swollen at tips and forming a dark epithecium; excipulum composed of radiating hyphae, hyphae 2-4 microns wide, dark green, gelatinized, irregular; ascoconidia rarely produced in the ascus, but abundantly on agar, 4 x 2 microns, ovoid, continuous, colorless
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