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Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871

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Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm., Führer Pilzk. 112 (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871

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Recorded in error
New Zealand
Political Region
The type is from Europe. NZ use incorporates multiple taxa, non related to H. miniata [JAC]

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(Fr.) P. Kumm.
Fr.
P. Kumm.
1871
112
ICN
species
Hygrocybe miniata

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Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871

Herb. HK. ZT 67/241: 'W of Kopara, Lake Haupiri, Ngahere, Prov. Westcoast, N.Z.; leg. Horak, 12.XII.1967'. - Herb. HK. ZT 68/223: ‘Red Jack Valley, Ngahere, Prov. Westcoast, N.Z.; leg. Horak, 28.III.1968'.
Pileus 10-25 mm diam., hemispherical, broadly convex, in age convex to plane and the centre of the pileus often depressed, margin always incurved, scarlet when young and fresh, fading to red-yellow, bleached when old, fibrillose-scurfy to minutely scaly (especially at the disc), dry, estriate. Lamellae broadly adnate to subdecurrent, ventricose, distant, concolorous with pileus becoming reddish to orange. Stipe 15-40 x 1.5-4 mm, cylindric. equal, sometimes tapering towards the base, dry, fistulose, glabrous. Context yellow to orange, scarlet beneath the cuticle and in the cortex of the stipe. Taste and odor not distinctive. Chemical reactions on pileus: KOH yellow; HCl – negative. Spores 7.5-9 x 4.5-5.5 µm, ovoid, smooth, inamyloid. Basidia 30-42 x 7-9 µm, 4-spored. Cystidia absent. Cuticle a trichodermium consisting of cylindric, not gelatinized hyphae (6-15 µm diam.), terminal elements subclavate, orange-red plasmatic pigment present. Clamp connections present or absent.
On soil under ferns or amongst mosses (under Nothofagus, Dacrydium, Weinmannia, Quintinia, etc.). New Zealand, cosmopolitan (?) species.
Hesler & Smith 1963.
The N.Z. material of H. miniata (Fr.) corresponds in all characters with the specimen described and illustrated from Europe and North America. In New Zealand the first record of this conspicuous fungus was made by Cooke (1879) and was mentioned later again by Colenso (1890). H. pseudococcineus Hongo ss. Stevenson may be placed close to forms of H. miniata (Fr.) but further observations are necessary in order to obtain more information about this species. According to Cleland (1934: 71) H. miniata (Fr.) also occurs in New South Wales, Australia.

Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871

SPECIMENS: NZ: G, Urewera N. P., ZT 809. - N, Reefton, Awarau River, Larry's Creek, ZT 2010. - WL: Ngahere, Kopara, Lake Ahaura, ZT 67/241; same locality, ZT 68/134; Ngahere, Red Jack Valley, ZT 68/223; Whataroa, Okarito, ZT 1982.
Pileus -35 mm, convex soon expanded with plane to depressed centre, margin always incurved, not upturned: brilliant red (scarlet, blood red) when young and fresh, fading to red-yellow, colour often bleaching in old specimens; dry, minutely fibrillose to scurfy-scaly (especially at disc), margin nonstriate. - Lamellae 6-18 (1-3-5) broadly adnate to subdecurrent, often ± triangular, up to 5 mm wide, not ventricose; concolorous with pileus, occasionally with orange tint, bleaching to whitish, reddish pink or pale orange, edges concolorous, entire. – Stipe 15-40 x 1.5-4 mm, cylindrical, equal or (often) tapering into base and enlarged into pileus; concolorous with pileus, paler or whitish towards base; dry, glabrous (rarely minutely fibrillose), hollow to fistulose, single or caespitose. - Context red beneath cuticle of pileus and cortex of stipe, otherwise pale yellow-orange. - Odour and taste not distinctive. - Chemical rcactions on pileus: KOH - yellow, HCI - negative. Spores 7.5-9 x 4.5-5.5 um, ovoid. - Basidia 30-70 x 7-9 um, 4-spored. - Cystidia absent. - Pileipellis a trichoderm of cylindrical hyphae (6-15 um diam.), terminal cells often conical or subfusoid, membrane not gelatinised, with orangered (water) or yellow (KOH) plasmatic pigment clamp connections present (Pl. 1, Fig.l).
DISTRIBUTION: NZ (N, WL); AUS (NSW, Q, SA, VIC). -Widespread in northern hemisphere (Europe, Japan, USA).
ECOLOGY: Common; saprobic on soil among moss-lichen or Sphagnum, rarely on decaying trunk of fems or among litter in Nothofagus (N. fusca, N. menziesii), Leptospermum scoparium or in broadleaved-conifer forests (Weinmannia, Quintinia. Dacrydium). December-March.
ICON.: Horak (1973: 150). - Konrad & Maublanc (1924-1937: tab. 384,1).

This species is readly recognised by its brilliant red colour, the ± triangular lamellae and the scurfy pileus, composed of rather large, non gelatinised hyphae (Amolds,1977). New Zealand and Australian records of H. miniata have already been reported in the last century by Cooke (1879), Colenso (1890), and Massee (1898). It is likely that H. coccineus (Fr.) Fr. ss. Massee (1898) and Stevenson (1962) also represent the same taxon.

In some of the New Zealand collections of H. miniata reported here with the colour of the gills was observed to vary from whitish (cf. H. helobius. Arnolds 1974) or red-orange to scarlet. Since this often age-dependent colour change is noted also on basidiomes within the same population this character obviously has no significant taxonomic value.

TYPE: Europe (Sweden).
Pileus 1.5-2-5 cm. across, flesh thin, convex, obtuse, then umbilicate, at first even, glabrous, and crimson, then becoming pale, opaque, and squamulose ; gills adnate, not at all decurrent, distant, distinct, rather thick and firm, yellow, or sometimes more or less tinged with crimson; stem 3-5 cm. long, about 2 mm. thick, even, glabrous, shining, crimson, equal, round, imperfectly stuffed; spores elliptical, 10 x 6 µ.
Maungaroa, New Zealand. Europe, Australia, Ceylon.
Among grass, in pastures, roads, &c.
Pileus becoming umbilicate, bleached, and squamulose when old.
This was also recorded by Massee, i.e. supra, but the writer has not collected it. Both these species are described and illustrated by Lange and others.

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Agaricus miniatus Fr. (1821)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. (1871)
Hygrophorus miniatus (Fr.) Fr. 1838
Hygrophorus miniatus (Fr.) Fr. (1838)
Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871

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Hygrocybe miniata (Fr.) P. Kumm. 1871
United Kingdom

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1cb18db2-36b9-11d5-9548-00d0592d548c
scientific name
Names_Fungi
1 January 2000
28 November 2022
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