E-Flora BC: Electronic Atlas of the Flora of British Columbia

Clavulina cinerea (Fr.) J. Schroet.
ashy coral mushroom
Clavulinaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

© Bryan Kelly-McArthur  Email the photographer   (Photo ID #74766)

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Distribution of Clavulina cinerea
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Species Information

Summary:
Clavulina cinerea is profusely branched from a short base, and branches are pallid, grayish, or purple-gray. Microscopic features include broadly elliptic to nearly round, smooth spores, and 2-spored basidia. It is sometimes blackened from the base upward when attacked by Helminthosphaeria clavariarum, a parasitic fungus. Clavulina cinerea is considered to be common in north temperate parts of the world (Corner(2)).

It has been reported from CA (Arora), and BC (in Redhead(5)). There are collections labeled as this species from BC at the Pacific Forestry Centre and the University of British Columbia, and collections from WA and OR at Oregon State University.
Fruiting body:
2-11cm wide, 2-11cm high, "erect or somewhat spreading, profusely branched", branches often irregular in shape, often resulting in somewhat tangled appearance, smooth or wrinkled to somewhat flattened, tips acute or blunt, often forked, (Arora), 2.5-10cm high, generally much branched with compact branches, stout and polychotomous in lower part, dichotomous in upper part with blunt tips, "sometimes flattened and toothed but seldom slightly cristate, not fimbriate, occasionally subsimple"; branches becoming longitudinally rugulose [finely wrinkled], rather irregular and unequal, (Corner)
Flesh:
brittle; white, (Arora), firm; grayish white, (Corner), fibrous to brittle; white, (Bessette)
Branch color:
pallid soon becoming grayish to ashy gray, purple-gray, bluish gray, dark gray, or even brownish gray, (Arora), gray to dark cinereous [ash-gray], often tinged purplish, often brownish when old, (Corner), white when young, becoming ashy gray, (Bessette)
Stem:
short, fleshy sterile base or "trunk"''; colored like branches or often whitish at very base, (Arora), up to 3cm long and 1cm wide, sometimes apparently absent; white or colored as branches, (Corner)
Odor:
none in particular (Corner)
Taste:
usually mild (Arora), none in particular (Corner)
Microscopic:
spores 6.5-11 x 5.5-10 microns, broadly elliptic to nearly round, smooth; basidia 2-spored, (Arora), spores 6.5-11 x 6-10 microns, nearly round or broadly elliptic, smooth, with one droplet; basidia 40-70 x 5-12 microns, sterigmata 6-7.5 microns; hymenium thickening to 200 microns, subhymenial hyphae 3-5 microns wide, cystidia none; hyphae 25-170 x 3-15(24) microns, clamped, (Corner), spores inamyloid (Bessette)
Spore Deposit:
white (Arora), whitish or yellowish (Phillips)

Habitat / Range

single, scattered, or in groups "on ground in mixed woods and under conifers", (Arora), scattered or in groups or clumps in moss on the ground or pine needles in coniferous or mixed woods, August to October, (Phillips)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Clavaria cinerea Fr.
Clavaria fuliginea Pers.
Clavaria grisea Fr.
Clavaria sphaerospora Ellis. et Everh.
Ramaria cinerea Gray
Tomentella ruttneri Litsch.

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

highly rated by some authorities, but insipid, (Arora), edible (Corner)

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Corner(2), Arora(1)*, Phillips(1)*, Bessette(2)*, Miller(14)*, Redhead(5), Buczacki(1)*, Kuo(7)*, Desjardin(6)*, Marrone(1)*

References for the fungi

General References