Dacrymyces ovisporus Bref.
pine jelly-spot
Dacrymycetaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

Photograph

© Jim Riley     (Photo ID #73222)


Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Dacrymyces ovisporus
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Species Information

Summary:
{See also Dacrymyces Table.} Dacrymyces ovisporus is unique among dacrymycetaceous fungi in that its spores are broadly oval (rather than cylindric or allantoid) and muriform (with septa in more than one plane) (Bandoni 1963). Fruiting bodies are orange when fresh and convoluted with a small rooting base.
Microscopic:
spores (9.5)13-15 x 8-12 microns, nearly round to broadly oval, faintly tinted, apiculate, thin-walled with thin septa, (McNabb), spore initially becomes divided by a single transverse, longitudinal, or oblique septum, then two secondary septa form at right angles to the first, and finally some thin irregularly placed septa, (Bandoni), germination by colorless, spherical conidia, or by germ tubes; probasidia 57-80 x 4.5-6 microns, cylindric-subclavate, with basal clamp connections, becoming bifurcate; hymenium composed of basidia and dikaryophyses, the latter "simple, often thick-walled, irregularly shaped apically, frequently with clamp connections throughout their length"; internal hyphae "thin-walled, smooth, usually heavily gelatinised, clamp connections present", (McNabb), spores 16-17 x 9.75-11.75 microns, mostly oval but sometimes elliptic, (Reid)
Notes:
It is found in BC, (Bandoni), Germany and Sweden, (McNabb), Finland, Norway, and United Kingdom, (in Reid), and Estonia (Raitviir).

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Spores of Dacrymyces chrysocomus are occasionally similar in shape and have septa in more than one plane, but the majority of spores are broadly and bluntly fusiform [spindle-shaped], (McNabb). See also SIMILAR section of Dacrymyces variisporus.
Habitat
conifer wood (McNabb), all year (Buczacki)

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Sebacina atrata Burt
Tremella epigaea Berk. & Broome