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

Nidula candida (Peck) V.S. White
common gel bird's nest
Agaricaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

© Paul Dawson  Email the photographer   (Photo ID #83772)

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Distribution of Nidula candida
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Species Information

Summary:
{See also Common Bird''s Nests Table.} Features include the flower-pot to mug shape with the mouth turned out; gray or gray brown shaggy exterior; white to yellowish or brown smooth interior; numerous gray to light brown eggs in a gelatinous matrix without a cord; and growth on rotting wood, berry canes, herbaceous debris, or soil. New fruitbodies may grow on top of old ones.

Nidula candida is found in WA, is apparently abundant in OR, is seldom as abundant in BC as N. niveotomentosa, and is also found in AK, (Brodie). It also occurs in CA (Arora). There is a collection from ID at Oregon State University.
Nest:
0.3-0.8cm across at top when mature, 0.5-1.5(2)cm high, cylindric or cushion-shaped becoming mug-shaped or flowerpot-shaped when mature (with vertical sides and a flaring mouth), rim more or less circular, wall tough and persistent, nest covered at first by lid, (Arora), 1-1.5cm high, having a wide-flaring mouth, (Brodie), 0.3-1cm wide, 0.5-2cm high, mug-like, with vertical sides and wide, flaring mouth, (Lincoff)
Outer Surface:
"whitish beneath a gray to brown or dull cinnamon scurfy or shaggy layer that covers at least the basal portion and the lid", (Arora), when fresh gray or even light wood-brown, may be bleached when old; shaggy, (Brodie), gray-brown to ocher; scurfy, (Phillips), gray to light brown; shaggy, (Lincoff)
Inner Surface:
white to yellowish or brown; smooth, (Arora)
Microscopic:
spores 6-10 x 4-8 microns, elliptic to nearly round, smooth, colorless, (Arora), spores 8-10 x 4-6 microns, elliptic; eggs with a thin tunica (Brodie)

Habitat / Range

in groups, "on rotting wood, berry canes, and herbaceous debris in gardens, woods, along streams, etc.", in California common in late fall and winter or even spring, but empty nests persisting for months, (Arora), on old berry canes, rotten wood, or rich soil, June to October, (Phillips)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Nidularia candida Peck

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

no (Phillips)

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Brodie(1), Arora(1), Siegel(2)*, Phillips(1)*, Lincoff(2)*, Schalkwijk-Barendsen(1)*, Fay(1), Trudell(4)*, Desjardin(6)*

References for the fungi

General References