Ossicaulis

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Ossicaulis
Ossicaulis lignatilis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Lyophyllaceae
Genus: Ossicaulis
Redhead & Ginns (1985)
Type species
Ossicaulis lignatilis
(Pers.) Redhead & Ginns (1985)
Species

O. borealis
O. lignatilis
O. salomii
O. semiocculta
O. sichuanensis
O. yunnanensis

Ossicaulis is a genus of mushroom-forming fungi in the family Lyophyllaceae.[1]

The genus was circumscribed in 1985 to contain the species originally described as Agaricus lignatilis by Christian Hendrik Persoon in 1801.[2] This was considered the sole species in the genus until 2007, when Marco Contu validly published a description of O. lachnopus from collections in Italy.[3] Geentic analysess published in 2013 confirms that O. lachnopus and O. lignatilis should be considered distinct species.[4] Molecular genetics analysis suggests that Ossicaulis is most closely related to the genera Asterophora, Hypsizygus, Lyophyllum, and Tricholomella.[5]

Description

Ossicaulis species have gills that are adnexed, adnate or somewhat decurrent and a stipe that is centrally or laterally attached to the cap. The hyphal system is monomitic (meaning only generative hyphae are present), the trama is regular, and there are clamp connections in the hyphae. Spores are small and ellipsoidal in shape. The cap cuticle features coral-shaped (coralloid) hyphae, and there are additionally coralloid to narrowly club-shaped cheilocystidia in the hymenium. The two species are similar in most macroscopic characteristics, but they can be reliably differentiated by differences in spore width: O. lachnopus is 2.8–4.0 by 2.0–2.4 μm, while the dimensions of O. lignatilis spores are 4.0–5.6 by 2.4–3.2 μm.[4][5]

Habitat and distribution

Species

References

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