Mucronella bresadolae
Mucronella bresadolae © Boleslaw Kuznik
(Photo: © Boleslaw Kuznik)

Mucronella bresadolae (Quélet) Corner
Supplement to "A Monograph of Clavaria and Allied Genera": 172. 1970.

Common Name: none

Synonym: Mucronella alba Lloyd

  • Sporocarp

    Fruiting body, 2.0-7.0 mm tall, approximately 1.0 mm thick simple, slender, tapered above and below, appearing spindle-shaped, round in cross section, solid, the upper portion fertile; surface glabrous, whitish, on a short inconspicuous, narrowed sterile base, the latter cream-yellow, minutely hairy when viewed with a hand lens; fruiting bodies typically clustered, hanging from a lignicolous substrate; odor indistinct; taste mild.

  • Spores

    Spores 4.5-6.0 x 3.5-4.5 µm, subglobose, broadly ellipsoid to tear-shaped, smooth, thin-walled, hilar appendage inconspicuous, amyloid; spore deposit not seen.

  • Habitat

    Single to densely clustered on well-decayed conifer wood; fruiting during the mid-winter months.

  • Edibility

    Unknown, too small to be of culinary value.

  • Comments

    Looking much like a miniature Hericium erinaceus, and possibly distantly related, this tooth fungus is easily recognized by its inverted growth form and lignicolous habit. Though not rare, it is seldom found, except by collectors combing downed logs for inconspicuous polypores, mycenas, etc. An interesting aspect of this fungus is the presence of crystals in the hyphal tissue, many of which are tetrahedral in shape.

  • Other Descriptions and Photos

    (D=Description; I=Illustration; P=Photo; CP=Color Photo)

Species Index
Bibliography
Glossary
Top Page