Systematics Collections Data

PDD 87567 – Geoglossum Pers. 1794

Data provider:
New Zealand Fungarium - Te Kohinga Hekaheka o Aotearoa
Barcode:
PDD 87567
Specimen type:
Packet
Loan status:
Active
Database record added:
01 April 2010
Database record updated:
11 February 2024
Components
Primary component
Active identification
Determined name:
Geoglossum turzae aff.
Determiner:
J.A. Cooper
Identification date:
2023 (Verbatim: 2023)
Preferred name:
Geoglossum Pers. 1794
Division:
Ascomycota
Class:
Lichinomycetes
Order:
Geoglossales
Family:
Geoglossaceae
Identification type:
Determination
Associations:
has host Nothofagus menziesii
Substrate:
soil
Other identifications
Identification
Determined name:
Geoglossum umbratile
Determiner:
J.A. Cooper
Determiners reference no.:
JAC10715
Identification date:
Preferred name:
Geoglossum umbratile Sacc. 1878
Active:
no
Identification type:
Determination
Other components
Active identification
Determined name:
Nothofagus menziesii
Determiner:
Identification date:
Preferred name:
Lophozonia menziesii (Hook.f.) Heenan & Smissen
Division:
Tracheophyta
Class:
Magnoliopsida
Order:
Fagales
Family:
Nothofagaceae
Identification type:
Determination
Present:
no
Collection events
Primary collection event
Collection event type:
Unknown
Standard locality
Location:
Waipori Gorge Picnic Site
Georeferences:
Latitude and Longitude (WGS84):  -45.9279  170.055 
Verbatim locality:
Waipori Gorge Picnic Site
Verbatim collector:
G. Gates
Standardised collector:
G. Gates
Verbatim date:
2008/05/15
Start date:
2008-05-15
Country:
New Zealand
New Zealand Area Codes:
Dunedin
Native lands:
Ngāi Tahu
Georeferences:
New Zealand Map Grid:  2281458E 5471459N  (WGS84 -45.927802 170.055074)
Habitat:
Beech-broadleaved forest
Specimen notes
Public Note:
stipe not gelatinous. I'd say this has late pigmentation of spores. This fails in Brian's key because it has paraphyses which are curved and constricted and septate at the apex. He says umbratile has curved, non constricted and non apically septate paraphyses and yet that's not what he's drawn in Fig. 3 'Beaton 326 = G. barlae'. Obviously a continuum here, and therefore also close to australe = fallax. Most authorities separate fallax with late pigmenting spores. This fits within a broad circumscription of G. umbratile.
External links
Assigned reference numbers
JA Cooper Fungarium:
JAC10715
Permissions
Project permits
Reference:
PDD Collection - Local Contexts
Biocultural (BC) Notice