Phellinidium weirii (Murrill) Y.C. Dai
laminated root rot
Hymenochaetaceae

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 Phellinidium weirii
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Species Information

Summary:
Features include a perennial brown pore surface growing flat and firmly attached on wood of conifers, especially Western Red-cedar, firmly attached, with a paler brown, fringed margin, soft flesh that is light in weight, and microscopic characters including colorless oval spores, and conspicuous setal hyphae that project into the tubes. "The setal hyphae seen with a hand lens in the margin, tube layer, and rotted wood are good field characters" (Ginns). |What was thought to be a variation of Phellinidium weirii that affects Douglas-fir, true firs, and hemlock (as opposed to the one that affects Western Red-cedar and Alaskan Yellow-cedar) is now regarded as Phellinidium sulphurascens Pilat; Larsen et al. (1994) summarize the criteria for separating P. sulphurascens and P. weirii: 1) P. weirii usually occurs on Western Red-Cedar, whereas P. sulphurascens usually occurs on conifers other than Western Red-Cedar, 2) fruitbodies are usually perennial in P. weirii and usually annual in P. sulphurascens, 3) sporulation occurs in spring / mid-summer in P. weirii and in late summer / fall in P. sulphurascens, 4) in North America, pathogenesis by P. weirii does not result in death of the host - stem breakage is caused by butt-rot, but with P. sulphurascens in North America pathogenesis involved with root-rot results in death of the host and windthrow associated with "root-ball", 5) spores eventually have 2 germ tubes and germ tubes and juvenile mycelia are 2-3.5 microns wide in P. weirii, whereas spores have one germ tube and germ tubes and juvenile mycelia are 4.5-6 microns wide in P. sulphurascens, 6) dimensions of setal hyphae in wood and test tube culture are greater in P. sulphurascens, 7) columnar tufts of hyphae are present in test tube cultures at 6 weeks in P. weirii but not in at 6 weeks in P. sulphurascens, (Larsen, M.J.(11)). |The online Species Fungorum, accessed May 29, 2020, gave the current name as Coniferiporia weirii, but MycoBank, accessed the same day, included that name as an obligate or homotypic synonym.
Microscopic:
spores 4.5-6 x 3.5-4.5 microns, oval, smooth, inamyloid, colorless; basidia 4-spored, 10-11 x 5-5.5 microns, clavate, simple-septate at base; hymenial setae absent but projecting setal hyphae abundant, projecting up to 70 microns, 6-10 microns thick, straight, pointing toward the tube opening; hyphae of context of 2 other types: 1) 2.5-5.5 microns thick, "pale yellowish brown in KOH, thin-walled, with frequent branching, simple-septate", 2) 3-5.5 microns wide, "darker brown in KOH, thick-walled, with rare branching", (Gilbertson for P. weirii sensu lato), setal hyphae averaging 471.7 microns (with standard deviation 100 microns) x 8.1 microns (with standard deviation 2.1 microns), (Larsen, M.J.)
Notes:
Larsen, M.J.(11) used collections of P. weirii from BC, WA, OR, ID, and AK, and collections of P. sulphurascens from British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, and Russia; P. weirii found in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, (Gilbertson, including any P. sulphurascens collections).

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Phellinidium sulphurascens Pilat is very similar but grows on Pseudotsuga menziesii (Douglas-fir) and other conifers, and causes laminated root rot in Douglas-fir, whereas Phellinidium weirii sensu stricto grows on Thuja plica, causing butt rot, (see NOTES above). See also SIMILAR section of Fuscoporia ferruginosa and Phellinidium ferrugineofuscum.
Habitat
perennial on live and dead conifers, predominately on Thuja plicata (Western Red-cedar) and Pseudotsuga menziesii (Douglas-fir), (Ginns), perennial or annual, on conifers, causing yellowish laminated rot of roots and butt of living conifers, important as a heart rot of Western Red-cedar and as a root rot of second growth Douglas-fir and true firs, (Gilbertson, including Phellinidium sulphurascens), causes butt rot in Thuja plicata