Cytidia salicina (Fr.) Burt
scarlet-splash
Corticiaceae

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 Cytidia salicina
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Species Information

Summary:
Also listed in Cups and Crusts categories. Features include growth on attached dead or damaged willow branches, at first growing flat, but loosening along the margin to resemble shallow orange to wine-red cups, which then become confluent. Microscopic characters include cylindric spores that are smooth, iodine negative, and colorless; large basidia that protrude from a dense layer of dendrohyphidia; and monomitic hyphal system with hyphae that turn blue in sulfovanilline, have clamp connections, and are strongly agglutinated by gelatinous interhyphal substance.
Microscopic:
spores 12.5-17.5 x 4-5 microns, cylindric, slightly allantoid [curved], smooth, iodine negative, colorless, with many small droplets; basidia 4-spored, 80-100 x 7-9 microns, narrowly clavate, with basal clamp connection; cystidia none; dendrohyphidia in hymenium 2.5-3 microns wide, "very densely interwoven and imbedded in a gelatinous substance, gnarled, strongly branched, brownish", +/- thick-walled, stain bluish in sulfovanillin; hyphal system monomitic, hyphae 2-4 microns wide, thin-walled to thick-walled, septa with clamp connections, stain bluish in sulfovanillin, (Breitenbach), spores 12-18 x 4-5 microns, allantoid [curved sausage-shaped], smooth, inamyloid, acyanophilic; basidia 4-spored, very large, 75-100 x 8-11 microns (according to Bourdot 60-225 x 7-9 microns), young basidia "develop within the dendrohyphidial layer and protrude at maturity"; cystidia none, dendrohyphidia numerous, richly branched, forming a dense layer, light yellowish brown, best seen on young fruiting bodies as they seem to disintegrate to some degree as basidia develop, (best studied in KOH heated close to boiling over a flame, when the other hyphae will swell and the dendrohyphidia will not), stain strongly in sulfovanillin; hyphal system monomitic, hyphae about 2-3 microns wide, thin-walled to slightly thick-walled, mostly straight, sparsely septate and with clamp connections at all septa, strongly agglutinated by gelatinous interhyphal substances, all hyphae blue or violaceous blue in sulfovanillin, (Eriksson)
Notes:
Cytidia salicina is found in BC, WA, OR, ID, and also MB, NB, NF, NS, ON, PQ, YT, AK, AL, CO, CT, IN, LA, MA, ME, MI, MN, MT, NC, ND, NH, NM, NY, OH, PA, VA, VT, WI, WV, and WY, (Ginns), Europe including Switzerland, and Asia, (Breitenbach), France, Sweden, central and eastern Europe, and north Asia, (Eriksson), and Algeria, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Finland, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Norway, and Sweden, (Cooke).

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
For other Cytidia species see Cup and Crust categories. Cytidia lanata has receptacles with a woolly surface (Cooke).
Habitat
on "attached dead or damaged branches with bark, as well as standing trunks", of various Salix (willow) species, throughout the year but mature only in late fall, (Breitenbach), on various Salix species, Alnus spp., Betula papyrifera (Paper Birch), Populus spp., Prunus serotina (Black Cherry); on limbs, (Ginns), on dry, still attached twigs and branches of Salix, mostly seen in shadowed thickets on branches 1-2 meters above the ground, (Eriksson)

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Corticium analogum (Bourdot & Galzin) Burt
Hypochnicium analogum (Bourdot & Galzin) J. Erikss.
Tomentella badiofusca Bourdot & Galzin
Zygodesmus terrestris Berk. & Broome