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

Clavulina coralloides (L.) J. Schroet.
crested coral
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 #81389)

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Distribution of Clavulina coralloides
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Species Information

Summary:
Clavulina coralloides has whitish branches with toothed crest at tips (may be grayish and less crested when infected with Helminthosphaeria clavariarum), brittle to tough flesh, whitish or grayish stem (stem sometimes absent), growth in fields or under trees, and nearly round smooth spores on 2-spored basidia. Some authors regard Clavulina rugosa as part of this species, and the Arora description used below appears to include this "unbranched to sparingly branched, wrinkled or knobby" taxon. Clavulina coralloides tends to be infected by the ascomycete Helminthosphaeria clavariarum, which "produces gray to black colors in the clavulina (caused by formation of its minute fruitbodies) and seems to reduce branching of the tips, both of which can lead to confusion with C. cinerea", (Trudell, with Latin name italicized). C. coralloides is found in OR (Zeller(2), Dunham(1)), and BC (Schalkwijk-Barendsen). It is one of the Pacific Northwest''s commonest coral fungi (Ammirati).

It is found in temperate regions of the whole world, and is common, (Corner(2)). There are collections from WA, OR, and CA at Oregon State University, and collections from BC at the Pacific Forestry Centre and the University of British Columbia. The University of Washington also has collections from AK.
Fruiting body:
2-4cm wide, 2.5-8cm high, densely branched tufts with jagged, fringed, or crested tips, (Phillips), branches polychotomous or dichotomous in lower part, the tips acute and generally becoming cristate-fimbriate [with a crest - fringed] or spicular-denticulate [with small spikes or teeth] (20-100 microns wide) or even reduced to single hyphae, often flattened, sometimes merely subulate [awl-shaped], (Corner), up to 5cm wide, 2-7(12)cm high, erect but variable in form, ''"typical" form branched but other forms sparsely or irregularly branched and still others unbranched'', branches smooth in typical form, uneven or knobby or longitudinally wrinkled or flattened in other forms, tips acute and often finely toothed in "typical" form but blunt and often enlarged in others, (Arora)
Flesh:
"rather tough, or moderately brittle when turgid, sometimes hollow"; drying whitish, (Corner), brittle to rather tough; white, (Arora)
Branch color:
whitish, often becoming yellow-tinged or ocher, rarely pinkish white, (Phillips), white often becoming tinged yellowish, ochraceous or fuliginous, rarely pinkish white, (Corner), usually white, but sometimes tinged gray, buff, yellowish, or pinkish, tips often darkening when old or in dry weather, (Arora)
Stem:
up to 3cm long, sometimes none; whitish or grayish, (Phillips), 0.5-3cm long or practically absent, grayish when parasitized by Rosellinia clavariae, (Corner), present as sterile base, slender; white or darkened by a parasite, (Arora)
Odor:
none in particular (Corner)
Taste:
none in particular (Corner)
Microscopic:
spores 7-11 x 6.5-10 microns, nearly round, smooth, slightly thick-walled, with one droplet; basidia 40-60 x 6-8 microns, sterigmata 5-7 microns long; hymenium thickening up to 200 microns, subhymenial hyphae 3-5 microns wide; cystidia none; hyphae 25-200 x 3-15 microns, shorter near hymenium, clamped, colorless, the walls very slightly thickened; sterile base of stem "with narrow hyphae, 3-7 microns wide, at the surface and loosely projecting hyphal ends 30-100 microns long, often with a few subclavate sterile basidia as a loose and very irregular sterile hymenium passing gradually or suddenly into the hymenium" at a distance of 0.2-0.5cm from the base of the stem, (Corner), spores 7-11 x 6.5-10 microns, basidia 2-spored, (Phillips)
Spore Deposit:
white (Phillips)

Habitat / Range

single or scattered on ground in fields or under hardwoods and conifers, June to September, (Phillips), on the ground in fields and coniferous or hardwood woods, (Corner), July to October, (Lincoff), on the ground or dead wood (Courtecuisse), summer, fall, and early winter, (Miller), usually on soil, but at times on well-rotted wood, (Trudell)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Chaetoporellus latitans (Bourdot & Galzin) Bondartsev & Singer
Hyphodontia latitans (Bourdot & Galzin) Ginns &

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links


Genetic information (NCBI Taxonomy Database)
Taxonomic Information from the World Flora Online
Index Fungorium
Taxonomic reference: Corner(2) (as Clavulina cristata), Phillips(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Trudell(4)* (as Clavulina cristata), Miller(14)* (as Clavulina cristata), Lincoff(2)* (as Clavulina cristata), Schalkwijk-Barendsen(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Courtecuisse(1)* (as

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

edible (Arora), discard specimens that are parasitized by a blackening fungus (Ammirati)

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Corner(2) (as Clavulina cristata), Phillips(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Trudell(4)* (as Clavulina cristata), Miller(14)* (as Clavulina cristata), Lincoff(2)* (as Clavulina cristata), Schalkwijk-Barendsen(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Courtecuisse(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Arora(1)* (as Clavulina cristata group), Ammirati(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Sept(1)* (as Clavulina cristata), Zeller(2) (as Clavulina cristata), Dunham(1) (as Clavulina cristata), Bessette(2) (discussing Clavulina cinerea), Bacon(1)*, Buczacki(1)*, Kuo(7)* (as Clavulina cristata), Desjardin(6)* (as Clavulina cristata), Marrone(1)*

References for the fungi

General References