Clitocybe subcordispora

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clitocybe subcordispora
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Clitocybaceae
Genus: Clitocybe
Species:
C. subcordispora
Binomial name
Clitocybe subcordispora
Harmaja (1969)

Clitocybe subcordispora is a rare species of mushroom-forming fungus first described by the Finnish mycologist Harri Harmaja in 1969. It is characterized by its brownish, hygrophanous cap with red tints, pure white spore print, and distinctive subcordiform (somewhat heart-shaped) spores measuring 4.2–6.2 by 3.0–4.0 micrometres. This saprotrophic fungus grows in rows or arcs in dry, nutrient-poor heath forests dominated by pine or spruce, occasionally under Siberian larch or among mosses. The species is known only from hemiboreal and southern boreal zones of eastern Finland and is considered very rare.

Clitocybe subcordispora was formally described by the Finnish mycologist Harri Harmaja in 1969. The holotype was collected on 21 September 1967 in a dryish heath forest dominated by Picea and Pinus near Päijärvi, Vehkalahti, in South Karelia, Finland; an isotype (duplicate) is preserved at the herbarium of the University of Michigan.[1]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI