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

Spathularia flavida Fr.
fairy fan
Cudoniaceae

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 #81406)

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Distribution of Spathularia flavida
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Species Information

Summary:

Not available
Fruiting body:
1-10cm high, spore-bearing upper part flattened laterally, spatula-like or fan-like, running down opposite sides of stem; "pallid when young becoming pale yellow to yellow, buff, or cinnamon-buff to brownish (or occasionally pale orangish)"; surface at sides "smooth or wrinkled, sometimes lobed or contorted or with a notched apex", (Arora), 1-8cm high, spathulate or rarely compressed-clavate, arising from whitish or pale mycelium; spore-bearing upper part up to 3cm wide, usually much compressed [flattened], rarely flattened - club-shaped, more or less decurrent on opposite sides of the stem; light yellow to cinnamon-buff; smooth, undulate [wavy], rugose [wrinkled], sometimes lobed or contorted, (Mains), fertile head 1/2 to 2/3 the height of the fruitbody (Breitenbach)
Flesh:
white, not gelatinous, (Arora)
Stem:
(1)2-8cm x 0.2-1cm, variable in shape but often thicker at base, usually hollow; white to yellowish or colored like upper part but usually paler; smooth to finely mealy but not velvety, with white to pale yellow mycelium at base, (Arora), round in cross-section or somewhat compressed [flattened] in upper part; whitish, pale yellow to cinnamon-buff; bald, thinly byssoid or matted-tomentose, (Mains)
Microscopic:
spores 30-75(95) x 1.5-3 microns, needle-like, smooth, with 0-several septa, colorless under microscope but often yellow-brown in mass, especially when dry, (Arora), ascospores very variable in size 30-95 x 1.5-2.5 microns, acicular [needle-like], rounded in upper part, gradually narrowing in lower part, "0-several-septate, commonly continuous, the wall with a gelatinous layer swelling to 1.5-3 microns thick; conidia subspherical, ellipsoid or obovoid, 1-2 x 1-1.5 microns, 1-celled, hyaline, produced by the ascophores on sterigmata, sometimes replacing the ascospores and filling the asci"; asci 85-125 x 8-12 microns, clavate; paraphyses filiform [thread-like], simple or branched in lower part, not or irregularly branched in upper part, strongly curved or circinate [twisted round, coiled] or straight in upper part, colorless, (Mains), spores 35-65 x 2-3 microns, narrowly clavate to broadly filiform, colorless, multiseptate with scattered oil droplets, arranged parallel within asci; asci 8-spored, 100-125 x 11.5-14 microns, clavate, inamyloid; paraphyses slender, compound, tips spiraled and bent, (Castellano)

Habitat / Range

"scattered to gregarious or even clustered, sometimes in lines or circles, on humus or rotten wood under conifers (especially pine) or sometimes hardwoods", (Arora), cespitose [in tufts], gregarious, or scattered, sometimes growing in circles, on humus and rotten wood, (Mains)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Byssonectria violacea (J.C. Schmidt ex Fr.) Seaver
Mitruliopsis flavida Peck
Nectria violacea (J.C. Schmidt ex Fr.) Fr.

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

said to be edible, but rather tough, (Arora)

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Mains(3), Arora(1)*, Breitenbach(1)*, Trudell(4)*, Hansen, L.(1), Castellano(2)*, Barron(1)*, Schalkwijk-Barendsen(1)*, Tylutki(1)*, Sept(1)*, Siegel(3) (re Paracudonia spathulata)

References for the fungi

General References