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

Peniophora rufa (Fr.) Boidin
red tree brain
Peniophoraceae

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 #73267)

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Distribution of Peniophora rufa
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Species Information

Summary:
Peniophora rufa may be recognized on sight by 1) occurrence on fallen aspen and other Populus limbs and logs, and 2) small vinaceous to red pruinose fruitbodies with the surface gyrosely wrinkled. Microscopic characters include 3) spores that are suballantoid, smooth, colorless, and white to pale red in spore print, 4) cystidia of 2 types: apically encrusted cystidia with the basal part thin-walled, and sulfo-positive gloeocystidia with granular contents, thick walls, and often an outer layer of crystals, and 5) a monomitic hyphal system, the hyphae densely branched and intertwined, with clamp connections.

Peniophora rufa has been found in BC, OR, ID, AB, MB, NB, NF, NS, NT, ON, PE, PQ, SK, YT, AK, AZ, CO, IA, MA, ME, MI, MN, MT, ND, NE, NH, NM, NY, PA, VT, WI, and WY, (Ginns). Its distribution includes NF to MA and westward to ND and CO, (Burt). It occurs in Finland, Norway, and Sweden, (Eriksson). It is reported from WA by Andrew Parker, pers. comm.
Fruiting body:
resupinate, closely adnate [firmly attached], wart-like, round in outline, normally not confluent, mostly 0.3-1cm across, about 0.1cm thick, consistency firm, when dry hard; red to reddish brown, when mature with whitish pruina; irregularly tuberculate; margin in most cases undifferentiated but "when growing on secondary bark a white margin may be seen in fruitbodies still growing radially"; in section whitish except for red spore-bearing layer, (Eriksson), 0.5-1cm wide, wart-like, single or laterally fused, with free margin, without stem, bursts out from bark, convex to flat, becoming coarsely wrinkled, consistency waxy to cartilaginous; red to purple-brown, often with grayish bloom; smooth, (Lincoff), 0.2-0.4cm across, bursting out from the bark, coriaceous-fleshy, verruciform, plicate-tuberculose, peltate, the margin free all round; vinaceous-brown to hematite-red; often grayish pruinose, underside bald, (Burt)
Microscopic:
SPORES 7-9 x 2.5-3 microns, suballantoid, spore print pale red; BASIDIA 4-spored, 40-50 x 5-6 microns, clavate, with basal clamp connection, "basal part prolonged and interwoven", CYSTIDIA of 2 types: 1) numerous, small, apically encrusted cystidia, the encrusted part 10-12 x 5-6 microns, the basal part thin-walled, 2) sulfocystidia "of varying size, generally large, reaching a length of 200 microns" and a width of 20-25 microns, with granular contents, thick gelatinous walls, and often an outer layer of granular crystals, "larger cystidia emanating like pseudocystidia from the subicular layer", "with the thickening of the subhymenium, smaller sulfocystidia with thinner walls appear"; HYPHAE monomitic, with clamp connections, densely branched and intertwined, hyphae next to the substrate 3-4 microns wide, brown, and not swelling in KOH, those of the main part of the fruitbody colorless, swelling more or less, 5-8 microns wide or even more, "often with a grainy layer of crystals on the surface", hymenial hyphae 2-3 microns wide, thin-walled, not swelling, (Eriksson), SPORES 6-8.5 x 1.5-2 microns, cylindric, curved, smooth, colorless, GLOEOCYSTIDIA numerous, spore deposit white, (Lincoff), spores 6-8 x 1.5-2 microns, "even, curved", deposit white; GLOEOCYSTIDIA 50-90 x 7-10 microns, flexuous [wavy], "scattered in or near the hymenium but not protruding"; hymenium 1000-2000 microns thick at center, 600-800 microns thick in marginal part, composed of ascending, loosely interwoven, encrusted, colorless hyphae 4-4.5 microns wide over the encrustation, (Burt)

Habitat / Range

dead branches; slash; associated with a white rot, on Populus balsamifera (Balsam Poplar), P. grandidentata (Bigtooth Aspen), P. tremuloides (Quaking Aspen), P. trichocarpa (Black Cottonwood), Salix sp. (Willow), (Ginns), on dead twigs and branches of Quaking Aspen and other poplars, March to December, sometimes overwinters, (Lincoff), scattered or gregarious on dead fallen Populus tremuloides, March to December, (Burt), on branches of Populus tremula (European Aspen) on ground in dry habitats (Eriksson for Scandinavia)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Cyphella conglobata Burt

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Eriksson(5), Burt(2) (as Stereum rufum), Lincoff(2)*, Ginns(5)

References for the fungi

General References