Lactifluus caliendrifer Froyen & De Crop
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https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.56.35204 |
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https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D0437B99-BE41-86E5-13B8-86F58EDE1F91 |
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Lactifluus caliendrifer Froyen & De Crop |
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Lactifluus caliendrifer Froyen & De Crop Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 5 View Figure 5 , 6 View Figure 6
Original diagnosis.
Basidiocarps small (up to 3.5 cm cap diam.) and turning brown when bruised. Cap very velvety to tomentose, white to cream-coloured. Stipe smooth to velvety, white. Context with smell fruity, strong. Latex copious, watery white to white, sticky, turning dark yellow to mustard brown; taste acrid and a bit bitter. Basidiospores broadly ellipsoid, (5.8) 5.9- 7.0-7.1 -7.9 × (4.5) 4.7- 5.6-5.7 -6.2 μm (n=40, Q = 1.12- 1.24 -1.41); ornamented with irregular and isolated warts which are up to 1 μm high. True pleurocystidia absent, but with sterile elements in the hymenium. Pileipellis a palisade to lampropalisade. L. caliendrifer differs from its sister species, L. russulisporus , by the abundant thick-walled marginal cells, very long pileipellis hairs and slightly smaller basidia and spores with more regular and lower warts.
Basidiomes rather small. Pileus 19-34 mm diam., planoconvex, sometimes centrally depressed; surface very velvety, dull, pruinose, tomentose, covered with hairs in tufts, white to cream-coloured, becoming brown after bruising; margin inflexed. Stipe 11-17 × 4-7 mm, cylindrical, centrally attached; surface smooth to velvety, white, turning brownish when bruised. Lamellae adnate to decurrent, narrow and thin, 0.5-1.5 mm broad, crowded, with 3 to 4 lamellulae of different lengths between 2 lamellae, whitish, concolorous with pileus and becoming brownish when bruised; edge entire, concolorous. Context white, changing to pale pinkish near pileipellis after a while, turning brown when broken (6E8) or sometimes paler caramel (6C6), or camel (6D4); smell fruity, strong; taste unknown. Latex copious, watery white to white, sticky, turning dark yellow (4C8) after a few minutes, later mustard brown (5E6) after 15 minutes; taste acrid and a bit bitter.
Basidiospores broadly ellipsoid, (5.8) 5.9- 7.0-7.1 -7.9 × (4.5) 4.7- 5.6-5.7 -6.2 µm (n=40, Q = 1.12- 1.24 -1.41); ornamentation amyloid, composed of irregular or isolated warts which are up to 1 µm high, sometimes connected by low ridges, but not forming a reticulum; plage inamyloid. Basidia 27-55 × 8-12 µm, subcylindrical to subclavate, thin-walled, mostly 4-spored; content oil-like to granular. Pleurolamprocystidia absent. Sterile elements cylindrical, 28-52 × 4-8 µm, thin-walled and up to 3-septate, slightly emerging, with terminal cells 6-28 × 4-7.5 µm. Pleuropseudocystidia rare to abundant, 4-10 µm diam., emerging, irregularly cylindrical; apex obtuse to subcapitate; content oil-like to granular. Lamellae edge sterile. Marginal cells 28-61 × 3-6 µm, often septate: with 1 to 5 septae, with terminal cells up to 47 µm long, thick-walled, occasionally branched; apex obtuse to subcapitate. Hymenophoral trama cellular, with lactifers. Pileipellis a palisade to lampropalisade, elements of the suprapellis 60-440 × 2.5-5 µm; cylindrical, septate, sometimes capitate, slightly thick-walled; subpellis composed of isodiametric, mostly thin-walled cells. Stipitipellis a trichoderm to lamprotrichoderm; ascending hyphae 10-75 × 3-6 µm, up to 2 septate, often thick-walled, apex obtuse to capitate. Clamp connections absent.
Distribution.
Known from Thailand.
Ecology.
Thai montane and dipterocarp forest, growing under Dipterocarpus , Lithocarpus , Castanopsis and Quercus .
Etymology.
Means 'wearing a wig’, referring to the long hairs in the pileipellis.
Conservation status.
Unknown.
Additional material examined.
Thailand. Thoeng district, Chiang Rai, alt. 420 m, 19°36'45"N, 100°04'00"E, Forest roadside, dry dipterocarp forest (Longan plantation), 20 August 2012, K. Jatuwong, Wisitrassameewong 392 (GENT, MFLU); Doi Pui, Chiang Rai, alt. 650 m, 19°49'26"N, 99°52'19"E, bamboo forest, 3 July 2012, leg.: Wisitrassameewong 378 (holotypus, GENT, isotypus MFLU).
Remarks.
Lactifluus caliendrifer differs from its sister species, L. russulisporus , by the abundant thick-walled marginal cells, very long pileipellis hairs and slightly smaller basidia and spores with more regular and lower warts.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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