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dorsal/ventral..
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This image was created by user Dan Molter (shroomydan) at Mushroom Observer, a source for mycological images.You can contact this user here. English | español | français | italiano | македонски | português | +/−
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This image was created by user Irene Andersson (irenea) at Mushroom Observer, a source for mycological images.You can contact this user here. English | español | français | italiano | македонски | português | +/−
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: A fungus - Exidia recisa. This species, which is one of the so-called jelly fungi, is widespread, but not common; most of the best-selling popular identification guides to fungi do not include it. According to the book "Fungi of Switzerland - Volume 2" (Breitenbach and Kränzlin) it grows on "dead branches of Salix (willow) still attached to the tree.. on Populus (poplar) and Prunus.. also on Alnus (alder)". The fruiting bodies are found from autumn to spring, and the work just cited says: "whole fruiting body amber-coloured to dark red-brown, attached to the substrate by a short indistinct stalk". When dry, they become inconspicuous brownish patches; this photograph was taken on a very wet day, and the fruiting body is shown fully expanded. A similar species, Exidia repanda, is paler in colour, and is even less common; distribution maps:
http://data.nbn.org.uk/gridMap/gridMap.jsp?allDs=1&srchSpKey=NHMSYS0001482086 (E. recisa) and
http://data.nbn.org.uk/gridMap/gridMap.jsp?allDs=1&srchSpKey=NBNSYS0000021375 (E. repanda). Both species are shown and described at
http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.cegep-sept-iles.qc.ca%2Fraymondboyer%2Fchampignons%2FTremelles.htm&sl=fr&tl=en&hl=en&ie=UTF-8 (this page is auto-translated, slightly garbling some species names as a side-effect, but it has an option at the upper right to view the original undistorted French text); these species are also described in the book "Fungi without gills" (Ellis and Ellis). For a selection of other Exidia species, see
933073,
1000447, and
996198. Date: 12 December 2008. Source: From
geograph.org.uk. Author:
Lairich Rig. Attribution(
required by the license)Lairich Rig / A fungus - Exidia recisa /
CC BY-SA 2.0. Lairich Rig / A fungus - Exidia recisa. Camera location
55° 57′ 17.6″ N, 4° 31′ 20″ W View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 55.954900; -4.522200. Object location
55° 57′ 17.6″ N, 4° 31′ 20″ W View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 55.954900; -4.522200.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Slo.: pecljata zamazanka - syn.: Tremella recisa Ditmar - Habitat: modestly southeast inclined mountain slope, mixed wood, dominant Fagus Sylvatica, Picea abies; overgrown calcareous ground composed of old alluvial and glacial moraine scree, rocks and boulders, relatively warm and dry place, in shade, partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies, average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-8 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. - Substratum: fallen Fagus sylvatica trunk; mostly still in bark in its late initial stage of disintegration. - Comments: Three sporocarps found growing close together; fresh fruitbodies pinkish-brown, oac651, after two days in refrigerator becoming olive-brown, oac734; fruit body dimensions up to 5 x 4 x 2.5 cm; clumps spreading flat over the substratum and attached to it only at isolated spots resembling rudimentary short 'stalks'; context quite firm, gelatinous; taste indistinctive, smell none; SP not obtained, only a few (12) spores have been found. This observation looks at macroscopic level like Exidia recisa, but microscopy doesn't confirm this determination. Spores (which may eventually origin from somewhere else?) do not fit expectations. I was also unable to find small, longitudinally septate, almost globose basidia, which are characteristic to this species (see Ref.: 3). The surface of the blobs looks like a hymenium with 'regular' basidia, however without sterigmata. Have no explanation. Hence, this determination can be wrong. - Spores smooth. Dimensions:9,4 [10,4 ; 11,2] 12,3 x 5,5 [6,1 ; 6,5] 7,1 microns, Q = 1,5 [1,7 ; 1,8] 1,9; N = 12; C = 95%; Me = 10,8 x 6,3 microns, Qe = 1,7. Olympus CH20, NEA 40x/0.65, magnification 400x, in water, Congo red. AmScope MA500 digital camera. - Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJF - Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Anton Poler. (2) http://www.mycoquebec.org/bas.php?post=Exidia&l=r&nom=Exidia%20recisa%20/%20Exidie%20obconique&tag=Exidia%20recisa&gro=109 (3) J.Breitenbach, F.Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2. VerlagMykologia (1984), p64.
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Summary[
edit] Description: Polski: Exidia recisa. Location: Poland, Dolina Kobylańska. Date: 17 November 2018, 00:08:43. Source: Own work. Author:
Jerzy Opioła.