Summary: Also listed in Cups category. Ascocoryne sarcoides is not normally considered with Jelly fungi (it is an ascomycete). Features include a top-shaped to disc-shaped or cup-shaped fruitbody that is purple to pink and gelatinous, stem that is lacking or short, tightly clustered growth on wood, and microscopic characters including ascospores 10-19 microns long that are nonseptate to 1-septate. Breitenbach(1) say it can be separated from Ascocoryne cylichnium only by the spore size, and gives the same macroscopic description for both species, word for word. Breitenbach(1) also say that it is not rarely encountered in its conidial stage which usually differs only insignificantly from the ascus stage, and Dennis says that fruitbodies are almost invariably accompanied by a similarly colored conidial state.
Microscopic: spores 12-16 x 4.5-5 microns, elliptic, smooth, colorless, with single septa when ripe, with two droplets; asci 8-spored, 114-125 x 8-10, uniseriate to biseriate, amyloid; paraphyses cylindric, forked, with few septa, some rather thickened toward the tips, (Breitenbach), spores 10-19 x 3-5 microns, elliptic to inequilateral, often biseriate, "at first non-septate with 2 oil drops, becoming usually 1-septate, occasionally 3-septate, sometimes germinating within the ascus"; asci 8-spored, up to 160 x 10 microns, cylindric-clavate; paraphyses "slender, often abruptly swollen to 4 microns at the tip", (Dennis), when young may produce only asexual spores (Trudell)
Notes: Ascocoryne sarcoides occurs in CA (MykoWeb), throughout North America (Lincoff(2)), ME to OR and probably throughout North America, Europe, and the West Indies, (Seaver). The University of British Columbia has collections from BC and the University of Washington has collections from WA and New Zealand.
Habitat and Range
SIMILAR SPECIES
Ascocoryne cylichnium is very similar but often has larger fruitbodies and is distinguished by larger spores 18-30 x 4-6 microns, which become multiseptate and bud off spherical secondary spores while still in the ascus, (Dennis).
Habitat
usually in tight clusters, forming a surface sometimes as large as a hand, rarely single; on rotting branches and trunks of trees on ground, as well as stumps, (Breitenbach), clustered on stumps and fallen logs, (Dennis)