Summary:
Features include a bright orange to yellow orange cup that stains blue-green especially where handled, growth under conifers just after snow melt, and microscopic characters including round spores. An albino form with bluish stains was found in Idaho (Arora). Caloscypha fulgens is a parasite of conifer seeds (Trudell).
Odor:
none (Miller)
Taste:
mild (Miller)
Microscopic:
spores (5.5)6-6.5(7) microns in diameter, round or nearly round, smooth, colorless, pale yellow in Melzer''s, wall slightly thickened (to 0.5 microns), at first 2-seriate but when mature 1-seriate; asci 8-spored, 110-135 x 8-9 microns, inamyloid; paraphyses cylindric to wavy, some tapering in the apical 20 microns, 2.5-3.5 microns wide, generally septate and branched 40-60 microns below tips, contents homogeneous, (yellow granules noted in paraphyses by Seaver), (Ginns), spores 5-6 microns in diameter, round, smooth, colorless, without droplets; asci 8-spored, 100 x 10 microns, inamyloid; paraphyses cylindric, septate, forked toward base, (Breitenbach for Switzerland)
Notes:
It is found in BC, WA, OR, ID, and also AB, CA, CO, MT, UT, and WY, (Larsen), MB, NB, ON, PQ, (Ginns), and Europe and temperate Asia (Trudell).
| Origin Status | Provincial Status | BC List (Red Blue List) | COSEWIC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Native | S3S4 (2021) | Yellow | Not Listed |
Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Clavulinopsis pulchra (Peck) Corner
Ramariopsis laeticolor (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) R.H.