Asterodon ferruginosus Pat.
no common name
Hymenochaetaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

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Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Asterodon ferruginosus
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Species Information

Summary:
A distinctive character of the genus is the presence in the tissues of asterosetae, with 3-5(7) unbranched setae radiating from a central point. Other features of the species include 1) resupinate growth on rotten logs, under roots of old stumps, or in forest litter of mainly coniferous trees, 2) easily detachable, cottony, round fruitbodies, 3-20cm across and up to 0.5cm thick but much more extensive when confluent, the surface brownish orange to cinnamon brown, warted, soon composed of densely arranged teeth, and the margin thin, and radially fibrillose or cobwebby, 3) spores that are broadly elliptic, and colorless, with their walls thin or slightly thickened, 4) hymenial setae, and 5) hyphal system that is trimitic with generative hyphae, skeletal hyphae, and asterosetae. Fruitbodies of this species sometimes grow over the remains of the ones from the previous year, and seem to be layered: one such specimen had 7 layers and was more than 1.5cm thick, (Parmasto).
Microscopic:
SPORES 5-6.5(7) x 3.5-4.5 microns, broadly elliptic, with one side slightly flattened, walls thin or slightly thickened, [smooth from Parmasto notes on family]; BASIDIA 4-spored, 17-25(30) x 5-7(8) microns, "clavate, some slightly flexuose", sterigmata 4-5 microns long, basidioles present, without encrustation; HYPHIDIA rare, 1-2.5(3) microns wide, colorless; CYSTIDIA (cystidioles) not numerous, 20-50 x 4-6 microns, "mainly situated on top of a tooth, fusoid, with usually cylindric upper part, thin-walled"; HYMENIAL SETAE "numerous, 40-80 x 5-10 microns, single or as side branches of setal hyphae, simple or with 2-4 sidebranches at base, 25-80 x 5-10 microns, projecting to 40 microns, subulate to fusiform, with acute tip, straight, naked, without incrustation"; crystalline matter absent from hymenium; HYPHAE trimitic with 1) generative hyphae numerous, 1.5-3 microns wide, with thin, colorless or yellowish walls, septate, branched, 2) skeletal hyphae 1.5-3 microns, thick-walled, brownish, 3) asterosetae common, with 3-5(7) unbranched rays, each 30-120(150) x 5-8 microns, "in subhymenium smaller than at substrate"; hyphae in teeth more or less parallel, setal hyphae present in teeth, 60-170 x 5-7 microns, (Parmasto), SPORES 5-7.5 x 3-4 microns, oval to broadly elliptic, colorless; stellately branched setal hyphae abundant in subiculum and hymenium, (Martin), "hymenial setae with rays to 100 microns long and occasionally branched, generative hyphae narrow, simple-septate, and skeletal hyphae", (Ginns(23), regarding genus)
Notes:
Asterodon ferruginosus has been found in BC, WA, ID, NB, ON, PQ, YT, AK, CT, ME, MI, MT, NH, and NY, (Ginns(5)), and also AR, DE, MA, VT, WI, and Russia, (Parmasto).

Habitat and Range

Habitat
on bark and barkless wood; Abies balsamea (Balsam Fir), Abies lasiocarpa (Subalpine Fir), Betula alleghaniensis (Yellow Birch), Picea engelmannii (Engelmann Spruce), P. glauca (White Spruce), P. rubens (Red Spruce), Pinus monticola (Western White Pine), P. strobus (Eastern White Pine), Pseudotsuga menziesii (Douglas-fir), Thuja plicata (Western Red-cedar), Tsuga heterophylla (Western Hemlock); associated with a white rot, (Ginns(5)), also Acer rubrum, Betula papyrifera (Paper Birch), Fagus grandifolia, Populus grandidentata, Tsuga canadensis; on "rotten logs, under roots of old rotten stumps or in forest litter of mainly coniferous trees", (Parmasto)

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Asterodon setigera (Peck) Peck
Asterostroma ochrostroma Burt
Hydnochaete setigera Peck