Dermea pseudotsugae A. Funk
no common name
Dermateaceae

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 Dermea pseudotsugae
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Species Information

Summary:
Features include 1) tiny, circular, black or yellow fruitbodies with the spore-bearing surface flat or concave and the margin slightly raised, 2) consistency hard (fleshy when moist), 3) absent stem, 4) erumpent growth on Douglas-fir branches and stems, 5) the production of a yellowish brown color when specimens are mounted in KOH, and 6) microscopic characters. This species is a causal agent of phloem necrosis in Douglas-fir.
Chemical Reactions:
apothecia mounted in dilute KOH produce a yellow brown discoloration in the liquid (Funk(2))
Microscopic:
spores 16-28 x 4-7 microns, elliptic, straight or slightly bent, colorless, continuous to 3-septate; asci 8-spored, 80-150 x 9-14 microns, cylindric to clavate, short-stemmed, pore stains blue in iodine; paraphyses "longer than the asci and agglutinated to form an epithecium", filiform [thread-like], colorless, "septate, simple or branched, slightly swollen at the tips"; macroconidia 42-56 x 3-4 microns, sickle-shaped, colorless to pale yellow, 0-3-septate, microconidia 8-14 x 1-2 microns, filiform, curved or bent, colorless; conidiophores 18-30 microns long, colorless, simple or branched (Funk(2))
Notes:
Dermea pseudotsugae was described from specimens from the interior of BC. It occurs on BC coast but usually only in the conidial state. It has caused serious damage to Douglas-fir plantations in northern CA, (Funk(4)).

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Dermea balsamea also has relatively large (for Dermea), yellow to black apothecia and conidia with sharply pointed ends, exceeding 35 microns long, and both grow on conifers, but the fruiting structures of Dermea balsamea are larger: apothecia reach 0.25cm whereas those of D. pseudotsugae rarely exceed 0.15cm, the maximum length of the spores in D. balsamea is 7 microns more than in D. pseudotsugae, and the maximum length of the macroconidia in D. balsamea is twice the length in D. pseudotsugae, (Funk(2)). Dermea grovesii has reddish brown apothecia, (Funk(2)).
Habitat
"erumpent, separate, gregarious", on branches and stems of Pseudotsuga menziesii [Douglas-fir], late August and September, conidia produced somewhat earlier in the year, many of the apothecia overwintered "and in the spring were found to contain ascospores which did not appear to be viable", (Funk(2))

Synonyms

Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Peniophora velutina (DC.) Cooke
Thelephora velutina DC