Suillus quiescens

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Suillus quiescens
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Boletales
Family: Suillaceae
Genus: Suillus
Species:
S. quiescens
Binomial name
Suillus quiescens
T.D.Bruns & Vellinga (2010)
Suillus quiescens
Mycological characteristics
Pores on hymenium
Cap is convex
Stipe is bare
Spore print is brown
Ecology is mycorrhizal
Edibility is edible

Suillus quiescens is a pored mushroom in the genus Suillus (family Suillaceae) that forms ectomycorrhizae with pines. It was first collected in 2002 on Santa Cruz Island off the coast of California in association with bishop pine (Pinus muricata), and was formally described in 2010. The species has been recorded from coastal and montane sites in California and Oregon, and has also been introduced to New Zealand in association with non-native Monterey pine (Pinus radiata). It may be under-reported because it can persist in soil as a dormant spore bank, and because it can be mistaken for the look-alike Suillus brevipes. Although similar in general appearance, it can be distinguished by its paler immature cap and by the tiny glandular dots on the stipe that darken with age. The species is assessed as least concern on the IUCN Red List.

Fruit bodies of the fungus were first collected in 2002 on Santa Cruz Island, in Santa Barbara County. They were named provisionally as a new species, Suillus quiescens, in conference proceedings published in 2005.[2] The species was officially described and named in a 2010 Mycologia publication. The specific epithet quiescens refers to the organism's ability to wait dormant (quiescent) in the soil until it encounters pine roots.[3]

Phylogeny

S. bellinii

Phylogeny and relationships of S. quiescens and other Suillus species based on ITS sequences.[3]

Based on phylogenetic analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of ribosomal DNA of a number of Suillus species, S. quiescens is distinct from other morphologically similar species such as S. brevipes, S. volcanalis, and S. occidentalis. The S. quiescens sequences, which were obtained from fruit bodies and from mycorrhizal root tips, formed a clade.[3] The analysis showed that the S. quiescens sequences were matches to some unidentified Suillus sequences found from mycorrhizae of pine seedlings collected from Oregon[4] and California.[3][5]

A later multigene revision of Suillus (using ITS, LSU, TEFα-1, RPB1 and RPB2 sequences) placed S. quiescens in Suillus subgenus Suillus, section Suillus.[6] In that framework, sect. Suillus comprises Pinus-associated species that typically have a glabrous, viscid to glutinous cap and glandular dots on the stipe, and the section is supported by phylogenetic analyses.[6]

Description

Suillus quiescens resembles S. brevipes, shown here.

The cap ranges in shape from hemispheric to broadly convex, and has a diameter of 6 to 12 cm (2.4 to 4.7 in). The cap color is deep brown in mature specimens and lighter shades of brown in younger mushrooms. Young specimens have a sticky layer of gluten on the cap that dries out in maturity. The edge of the cap is rolled inwards in young specimens. The flesh of the cap is whitish and does not change color when bruised or cut. The tubes on the underside of the cap are light yellow to bright orange-yellow; the tube mouths are usually less than 1 mm wide. The stipe is usually between 2 and 4 cm (0.8 and 1.6 in) long, less frequently reaching up to 8 cm (3.1 in). It is either the same width throughout or slightly larger (bulbous) at the base. The color of the upper portion of the stipe is pale to light yellow, while the lower portion may be light brown or covered with streaks of glutinous material like that on the cap. The stipe surface is covered with fine glands that are initially slightly darker than the color of the stipe surface, but deepen to brown or nearly black after drying. The color of the spore print was not determined from the initial collections, but is thought to be yellow-brown to brown based on the accumulated spore deposit seen on the surface of the caps of neighboring fruit bodies.[3]

The elongate spores are oblong in face view, with dimensions of 6.1–14.7 by 2.4–3.7 μm. Most spores have a single large drop of oil in them. The spore-bearing cells, the basidia, are club-shaped, two- or four-spored, and measure 20.2–26.2 by 5.2–6.7 μm.[3]

Similar species

With its short stipe and sticky cap, S. quiescens is similar to S. brevipes. It may be distinguished from the latter species by the color of the young (light-brown) cap, the glandular dots at the top of stipes in mature specimens, and the yellowish color at the top of the stipe.[3]

Habitat and distribution

Conservation

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI