Omphalina Vol 5 # 6

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Vol. V, No 6 Jun. 21, 2014

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MPHALINA, newsletter of Foray Newfoundland & Labrador, has no fixed schedule of publication, and no promise to appear again. Its primary purpose is to serve as a conduit of information to registrants of the upcoming foray and secondarily as a communications tool with members. is an amateur, volunteer-run, community, not-for-profit organization with a mission to organize enjoyable and informative amateur mushroom forays in Newfoundland and Labrador and disseminate the knowledge gained. Webpage:

www.nlmushrooms.ca

ADDRESS Foray Newfoundland & Labrador 21 Pond Rd. Rocky Harbour NL A0K 4N0 CANADA E-mail: info AT nlmushrooms DOT ca BOARD OF DIRECTORS

CONSULTANTS

Michael Burzynski PRESIDENT

Geoff Thurlow TREASURER

Faye Murrin SECRETARY

MYCOLOGICAL Dave Malloch NB MUSEUM

Andrus Voitk Past PRESIDENT

Jim Cornish Jamie Graham Tina Leonard Anne Marceau Michele Piercey-Normore Maria Voitk Marian Wissink

AUDITOR Gordon Janes BONNELL COLE JANES

LEGAL COUNSEL Andrew May BROTHERS & BURDEN

Issues of OMPHALINA are archived in: Library and Archives Canada’s Electronic Collection <http://epe. lac-bac.gc.ca/100/201/300/omphalina/index.html>, and Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Queen Elizabeth II Library (printed copy also archived) <http://collections.mun.ca/cdm4/ description.php?phpReturn=typeListing.php&id=162>.

The content is neither discussed nor approved by the Board of Directors. Therefore, opinions expressed do not represent the views of the Board, the Corporation, the partners, the sponsors, or the members. Opinions are solely those of the authors and uncredited opinions solely those of the Editor. Please address comments, complaints, contributions to the self-appointed Editor, Andrus Voitk: seened AT gmail DOT com, … who eagerly invites contributions to OMPHALINA, dealing with any aspect even remotely related to mushrooms. Authors are guaranteed instant fame—fortune to follow. Authors retain copyright to all published material, and submission indicates permission to publish, subject to the usual editorial decisions. Issues are freely available to the public on the FNL website. Because content is protected by authors’ copyright, editors of other publications wishing to use any material, should ask first. No picture, no paper. Material should be original and should deal with the mycota of Newfoundland and Labrador. Cumulative index and detailed Information for Authors available on our website.

COVER Tricholoma dulciolens, photographed by Steve Trudell, Terra Nova National Park, September 30, 2012. The lead article is the first report of this species in North America. In a way. DNA matching had already shown that it grew in North America, but this is the first report of a collection that was identified and subsequently confirmed to be that species. However, it may turn out that this was only the first time the species was reported from North America under that name. Quite possibly the taxon was first described from North America as a variety of another species some time earlier. If you think this is confusing, wait until you read what is inside!

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Vol. V, No 6 Jun. 21, 2013

CONTENT Editor’s comments ................................. 2 Foray matters ......................................... 3 The forests of Gros Morne Michael Burzynski .............................. 3 Species of sect. Caligatum in NL Gulden, Trudell, Frøslev, Voitk ............. 5 Majority-rule taxonomy Andrus Voitk ...................................... 10 The Bishop’s sketchbook ........................ 14 New trichs for NL Trudell, Gulden ..................................

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Mail bag ................................................. 20 Partners ......................... inside back cover Notice ...................................... back cover

This issue and all previous issues available for download from the Foray Newfoundland & Labrador website <nlmushrooms.ca>.

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Happy Midsummer from one of the famous Red Chairs installed in our National Parks! When you come to our foray in Gros Morne National Park, you will find these Red Chairs in the most likely and most unlikely places. Sit. Take time to contemplate your surroundings窶馬ot unlike what you do in an art gallery. And welcome to our Tricholoma issue! Most Tricholoma species are late-season fruiters, so this should be in your hands well ahead of the trich season. The material is essentially the result of a bounteous 2011 Tricholoma season, which coincided with the participation of Gro Gulden and Steve Trudell as faculty, so it has taken a bit of time to put together. You can go straight to p. 15 for a description of 11 new species found in 2011. Two are not totally new: we have known and collected T. terreum under the name T. virgatum in the past. The two have been shown to be genetically synonymous and T. terreum is the older name. We have collected T. luteovirescens under the name T. subsejunctum; in this case, after due consideration, we shall continue to use that name because it is the earlier of the two, as well as a North American name. As you see, lots of room for taxonomic detective work to reconcile European and North American names and species. As with many other similar articles, do not expect to remember it all. Rather read it and get the general idea. Then file it to use as a reference when coming across our trichs. The lead articles introduce you to Tricholoma dulciolens, one of the species in Tricholoma section Caligatum. They also confirm that the pine mushroom of Newfoundland and Labrador

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is the more desirable (gastronomically speaking) Tricholoma matsutake, not Tricholoma magnivelare. As you will learn, Tricholoma section Caligatum in North America offers perhaps the best opportunity for taxonomic detective work. Our review of three of the four species found in on this continent (two in NL), suggests that at present they are participants in the Great Matsutake Masked Ball, where not one of them appears under its real name. Surely the magic hour should fast approach, when the masks are taken off and each identity bared, before other orphic players join the crowded party and totally confuse the scene of recondite merriment. Who will step up to do the unveiling? As always, first foray matters, then mycology.

See you at the Foray! andrus


Foray matters… 1. INFORMATION, REGISTRATION FORM, HOW TO GET THERE, etc. Please see OMPHALINA V, No 4 (April issue), as well as material stored on our website <nlmushrooms.ca>. Past issues of OMPHALINA may be downloaded from our website. 2. MYCOBLITZ For those able to make it, join us at Sir Richard Squires Memorial Provincial

Park at 11:00 AM, Fri. Sep. 12, 2014. See April OMPHALINA for details. 3. Most unfortunate late-breaking news: Parks, the partner hitherto providing our greatest support, was unable to continue due to decreased budgets during last year’s cut backs. We have already scaled back for this year, and you will probably see more. Your Board will deliberate further adjustments and you will be advised.

THE FORESTS OF GROS MORNE Michael Burzynski Coniferous and mixed forest cover 44% of Gros Morne’s area. Black spruce, white spruce, balsam fir, and white birch dominate the forest throughout in the park, although there are a few more species in the Lomond area. Generally, the more species of trees in the forest, the greater the diversity of fungi.

Mixed forest around Wigwam Pond

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Bonne Bay is a climatic divide. South of Bonne Bay, white pine, yellow birch, red maple, black ash, trembling aspen, and a number of shrubs are common forest species. They do not thrive north of the bay because it is slightly cooler. The richest forest in the park area is in the area of the Lomond River valley— probably the most interesting place in the park to search for fungi. Emerging from a tuckamore tunnel, Cow Head Trail

Least diverse—and most picturesque—is the dwarf forest locally called tuckamore. Along the coast, tuckamore is composed of white spruce and balsam fir trees that have been dwarfed and contorted by wind desiccation, salt spray, and ice abrasion. Most pruning takes place in winter when the trees cannot draw water from the soil, and strong onshore winds dry out and kill exposed buds and branches on the windward side of the trees. This causes the trees to grow as though they were leaning inland. At the upper beach the tuckamore is only ankle high. The trees get gradually taller with distance from the shore, forming a dense interwoven hedge that protects trees farther inland. Similar tuckamore forest occurs on the tops of hills, near the treeline. Tuckamore is almost impenetrable for hikers, the only efficient way through is to find a moose or caribou trail. The branches are so densely interwoven that little light reaches the floor, so there are no shrubs, and even few ferns and mosses. This is a very difficult place to look for fungi! Much of the lowland forest was hit hard by hemlock looper, a forest moth, in the 1980s and 1990s. Wind storms flattened the dead and weakened trees, and browsing of saplings by over-abundant introduced moose slowed or stopped regeneration. More than 40 km2 of lowland forest has converted to open grassland in the last three decades. Concern about forest health led to the Park ‘s decision to allow moose hunting, which began in 2011. Wetlands tend to favour black spruce and larch (locally called juniper). They thrive in the wet muck of rich fens, and they can even survive in dwarfed form in the depauperate, cold, waterlogged peat of bogs. On the highland tundra and on rock barrens, woody species such as black spruce, larch, white pine, common juniper, and ground juniper are severely dwarfed and grow extremely slowly. Some juniper stems from the Tablelands contain more than 300 annual growth rings in the diameter of a loonie.

Autumn colour near Lomond

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Species of Tricholoma section Caligatum in Newfoundland and Labrador Gro Gulden Steve Trudell Tobias Frøslev Andrus Voitk

Our 2012 foray in Terra Nova National Park took place at the peak of the late-fruiting Tricholoma season and was felicitous for tricholomas—to the great satisfaction of those faculty members with a special interest in the genus. The aromatic species of Tricholoma sect. Caligatum were especially evident, allowing us to recognize and review two species of the highly prized group from our province: T. matsutake (Figure 1 and title banner) and T. dulciolens (cover photo and Figure 2). This communication describes these two species in our province and allows us to confirm an earlier hypothesis that our matsutake complex mushroom is indeed T. matsutake and not the similar T. magnivelare found on the west coast of the continent.1 Tricholoma matsutake is among the highest prized mushrooms in the world in terms of both taste and cost. Its existence in eastern North America has been reported earlier.2

to be described in this group was the European T. caligatum, known from the Mediterranean region, which is why the group as a whole is known as Tricholoma sect. Caligatum.

For more than 1,000 years it has been the magic gourmet food of Japanese emperors and priests. Only relatively recently has it become available to ‘normal’ people in the Far East. The current price of prime button specimens has been reported to be over $1,000 U.S. a pound on the Japanese market. The most striking feature of the species is a strong and unique odour, once smelled, never forgotten.

We describe the two section Caligatum species in Newfoundland and Labrador. Figure 3 shows a phylogram of our collections among their kin, based on ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (rITS) DNA sequence data. and Table 1 compares their morphological characters.

Section Caligatum belongs to a group of fairly large, mostly brown, scaly tricholomas with a ring on the stem (formerly treated as Armillaria species) distributed across the northern hemisphere—most distinguished by a characteristic smell. The first species

Methods Identification was done with the aid of nuclear studies. DNA was extracted with a magnetic kit and the ITS regions were amplified and sequenced, as described elsewhere.3 The phylogenetic analyses were carried out using MAFFT v7 for alignment4 and TreeDyn according to established protocol.5

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Figure 1. Tricholoma matsutake, as it about the same as stem length in appears in Newfoundland and Labrador mature specimens, giving them a stout (see also title banner). Cap diameter habitus. The colour is much lighter

Tricholoma matsutake (S. Ito & S. Imai) Singer (Figure 1 and title banner). A fleshy, stubby light coloured mushroom, whose stem length is roughly the same as the cap diameter. CAP: 4-35 cm wide, inrolled, dome-shaped, flattens with maturity, initially attached to stem by veil, beige to tan with radial light brown fibrils, browning more with age. GILLS: White, crowded, notched. STEM: 4-25 x 2-5 cm, tapered toward base, white above ring, concolorous with cap below. FLESH: White, with an alluring odor all its own. SPORES: Spore print white, size 4.8-6.3 x 4.3-5.3 Îźm. ECOLOGY: Not uncommon its habitat: sandy soil among conifers, usually with pine among them. Peak fruiting at the end of September. DISTRIBUTION Eurasia, west to Scandinavia, Scotland6 and eastern North America, including Newfoundland (Figure 3). EDIBILITY: A desirable edible with a complex taste, of significant commercial value. Comment The identification of T. matsutake was not straightforward in our province. Our mushrooms were initially thought to be T. magnivelare, because their light colour

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than elsewhere in the world, but not as whitish as that of T. magnivelare on the Pacific coast (Figure 4D).

makes them resemble the whitish T. magnivelare of western North America, more than the dark T. matsutake found elsewhere, and their spore size overlapped that reported for T. magnivelare more than T. matsutake. Figure 4 shows the range of colours for Asian, Scandinavian and NL T. matsutake, compared to T. magnivelare from the Pacific coast. That NL specimens might be T. matsutake was first suspected in 2009, after NL collections were studied in a Master’s project by Rebecca Bravi.7 DNA analyses were not done, but known primers were tested and our mushrooms did not react to T. magnivelare reagents. Because T. matsutake had been reported from eastern North America,2 we hypothesized that our nonreactive collections might represent this taxon.1 Note that on the phylogram (Figure 3) our collections form a small subclade, not unusual with multicollection trees, and usually attributed to geographic variation. However, the matsutake clade has the lowest bootstrap support and our particular subclade has about 80% bootstrap support (not shown on the figure), making it conceivable that future multigene analyses could show it to be a distinct species.


Figure 2. Our long-stemmed section Caligatum species, Tricholoma

dulciolens, in situ. Note the elegantly slim stature, with more peaked and

Tricholoma dulciolens Kytöv. (Figure 2 and cover photo). A fleshy, long-stemmed mushroom with reddish brown scales covering a whitish background, whose stem length is about twice its cap diameter. CAP: 4-12 cm wide, initially inrolled, bluntly but obviously peaked, flattens with maturity but retains a blunt umbo, initially attached to stem by veil, white, covered with reddish brown scales, some browning with age. GILLS: White, crowded, notched. STEM: 6-20 x 2-4 cm, cylindrical or tapering downwards, white above ring, concolorous with cap ± banded below. FLESH: White, with an odour similar to that of T. matsutake and magnivelare. SPORES: Spore print white, size 4.8-6.8 x 4.3-5.8 μm. ECOLOGY: Relatively uncommon. Fruits in moss on sandy soil under Picea, without pine in NL. Peak fruiting at end of September. DISTRIBUTION: Known from Scandinavia, mountainous central Europe and likely across boreal North America, although so far confirmed phylogenetically only from its two sides. EDIBILITY: A desirable edible with a complex taste and potential commercial value.

darker cap, darker stem about twice the length of the cap diameter.

Comment On the last day of the foray, September 30, 2012, Diane Pelley found three perfect specimens of a new Tricholoma in the woods immediately behind the Terra Nova Hospitality Home, close to Terra Nova, NL, growing under Picea. GG recognized the species as T. dulciolens, a species she knew from her home in Norway. Compared to our T. matsutake, this species is more slender and dark, with smaller and scalier caps, and slightly smaller spores, growing with Picea, not Pinus. Tricholoma dulciolens was first described from Sweden in 1989.8 At the time of our 2012 discovery, it had not been reported from North America. We learned later9 that its presence in North America had been deduced (but not published) from genetic matching with sequences deposited in GenBank from a study where the species was identified as T. caligatum10. Very close ITS sequence matches for T. dulciolens in North America and Europe have since been published.6,11 This is the first time T. dulciolens is fully presented and prospectively recognized in North America.

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77

87 84 97 92

99

99 100 100

100 88 100

83 100

Figure 3. Phylogram of species in sect. Caligatum around the world. Collections are identified by GenBank or other accession numbers, followed by region of origin. Pink background for all NL collections, and red background for all other T. matsutake collections from North America. Bootstrap values (%) above node branch.

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Our collections nestle in the Tricholoma matsutake and T. dulciolens clades. First, a large tree was made from the ITS sequences of all sect. Caligatum species listed on the curated UNITE website. To develop the tree shown here, two representatives of each clade were selected, and North American species augmented by

additional collections to show their full geographic extent. Four species of the section are found in North America: T. magnivelare on the Pacific coast, T. matsutake in the east, T. dulciolens probably across the boreal forest, east to west, and an as yet undescribed species found in Mexico. See also map, Figure 3, next article.


A

Figure 4. The shades of the Tricholoma matsutake cap compared to T. magnivelare. A: red brown from Japan (photo: Tomomatsu), B: black-brown from Sweden (photo: H. Marklund), and C: tan-brown from Newfoundland (photo: M. Burzynski),

Cap

colour

Stem

shape shape

compared to D: the almost pure white T. magnivelare cap from the west coast of North America (the brown in the photo is primarily sand, not mushroom colour) (photo: GG) The lighter colour of NL specimens,

T. matsutake tan to light brown with medium brown fibrils dome to flat tapers to base

proportion to cap approximately equal diameter Mycorrhizal host pine ± other conifers Spore size (μm) 4.8-6.3 x 4.5-5.3

D

C

B

compared to those found on more easterly continents, is a consistent finding. The difference between the tan mushroom of NL and the white mushroom from the Pacific Coast would be even more obvious here, were the sand brushed off the latter.

T. dulciolens red-brown from darker scales on a whitish background peaked to flat with umbo even or parallel, sometimes tapering longer spruce ± other conifers 4.8-6.8 x 4.3-5.8

Table 1. Macroscopic identification characters of our sect. Caligatum species. Characters listed here refer to the species as they appear in NL, not as they are known elsewhere.

Observation The names used here correspond with the majorityrule consensus taxonomy, as demonstrated by the naming of sequences in GenBank and UNITE databases and the application of names by Christensen & Heilmann-Clausen.6 In other words, there is a general consensus or agreement among taxonomists, mycologists, phylogeneticists and other interested parties that the names we apply to the species we have identified and their relatives, are the “correct” or currently accepted names for these organisms. But see the following article for different views. References 1. 2.

3.

Bravi B, Voitk A: Tricholoma matsutake, the pine mushroom. OMPHALINA 2(6):5-6. 2011. Chapela IH, Garbelotto M: Phylogeography and evolution in matsutake and close allies inferred by analyses of ITS sequences and AFLPs. Mycologia 96:730-741. 2004. Frøslev TG, Matheny PB, Hibbett D: Lower level relationships in the mushroom genus Cortinarius (Basidiomycota, Agaricales): A comparison of RPB1, RPB2, and ITS

phylogenies. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 37: 602-618. 2005. 4. http://mafft.cbrc.jp/alignment/software/ 5. Dereeper A, Guignon V, Blanc G, Audic S, Buffet S, Chevenet F, Dufayard J-F, Guindon S, Lefort V, Lescot M, Claverie J-M, Gascuel O: Phylogeny.fr: robust phylogenetic analysis for the non-specialist. Nucleic Acids Research. 2008 Jul 1; 36 (Web Server Issue):W465-9. Epub Apr 19, 2008. 6. Christensen M, Heilmann-Clausen J: The genus Tricholoma. Fungi of northern Europe, vol. 4. Svampetryk. ISBN 978-87-983581-8-3. 2013. 7. Bravi BS: An ectomycorrhizal symbiosis? A morphological and molecular characterization of Tricholoma magnivelare in Pinus contorta roots from the West Chilcotin Plateau of British Columbia, Canada. MSc Thesis, University of British Columbia, Vancouver. 2009. 8. Kytövuori I: The Tricholoma caligatum group in Europe and North Africa. Karstenia 28:65-77. 1988. 9. Heilmann-Clausen J: personal communication, unpublished data (at the time). 2013. 10. Lim SA, Fischer A, Berbee M, Berch SM: Is the booted tricholoma in British Columbia really Japanese matsutake? BC Journal of Ecosystems Management, 3(1):1-7. 2003. 11. Murata H, Ota Y, Yamada A, Ohta A, Yamanaka T, Neda H: Phylogenetic position of the ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete Tricholoma dulciolens in relation to species of Tricholoma that produce “matsutake” mushrooms. Mycoscence 54:438-443. 2013.

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How secure is majority-rule consensus taxonomy of species in the boreal North American Tricholoma section Caligatum? Andrus Voitk When experts agree on a matter, then surely that must be more solid than The Rock*? This article hopes to demonstrate why a respectful irreverence toward authority is a good life philosophy. Or, as Socrates said**, “The unexamined taxonomy is not worth naming.” The previous article stated that it used majority-rule consensus taxonomy for the North American species in sect. Caligatum, as found in UNITE and a recent book, to wit, Tricholoma matsutake in eastern North America, T. dulciolens across the boreal forest, and T. magnivelare on the Pacific Coast. These groups form three well-supported clades on phylogenetic analysis, but are the names currently applied to them by experts*** equally secure? Let us examine them one at a time. Tricholoma matsutake One would think that such a highly prized mushroom would have its name well worked out, secure forever. However, one need not delve too deeply into its recent taxonomic past to discover weakness. According to the rules of nomenclature, the first legitimately described name of an organism has precedence. Names given at subsequent descriptions are considered synonyms and subsumed under the original. The first valid description of this mushroom was Armillaria nauseosa by A. Blytt in 1905,1 and later transferred to Tricholoma by Kytövuori as T. nauseosum.2 The mushroom in Asia was described twenty years later as Armillaria matsutake by S. Ito and S. Imai,3 and transferred to Tricholoma as T. matsutake by Singer.4 Their synonymy was discovered some years later, and confirmed by nuclear

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studies. According to the rules, the later name should be considered a synonym of the earlier one and the species be correctly named T. nauseosum. However, in view of the major commercial importance of this mushroom, an appeal to conserve the more appealing name T. matsutake was made and adopted. Economics is as nefariously influential in science as it is in other aspects of life. There is a risk that at a later time more puritanical taxonomists may decide to revert to more strict observance of the scientific rules. An argument from a highly respected senior mycologist might convince the Nomenclature Committee for Fungi that such change is desirable. Authority is almost as nefariously

influential in science as economics— just as it is in other aspects of life. This minor threat to its name is rather unlikely. But read under T. magnivelare to learn why both names, T. nauseosum and T. matsutake, could disappear altogether! Tricholoma dulciolens Our recent find may also come under close scrutiny by the rules of nomenclature, although chances are that it will escape unscathed. It was first described from Sweden by Kytövuori as Tricholoma dulciolens in 1988.2 However, nine years earlier Smith had described a similar North American taxon, Armillaria caligata var. occidentalis.5 Kytövuori was aware of these earlier descriptions and stated that his T. dulciolens “greatly

*Term by which Newfoundlanders and Labradoreans refer to Newfoundland. **He did no such thing. ***Majority-rule consensus nomenclature for this group by non-specialists differs: most people in North America refer to all matsutake-like mushrooms in North America as T. magnivelare, and all dulciolens-like mushrooms as T. caligatum. Because non-specialists outnumber specialists, true majority-rule consensus nomenclature for this group would be determined by the former.


resembles the American taxon Armillaria caligata var. occidentalis.” Noting some differences between dried material, he declared, “I have thought it best to describe the European material as a new species. Its relationship to var. occidentalis needs further research with more material.” Our collections match Tricholoma dulciolens from Europe, as well as collections initially identified as “T. caligatum” from California and British Columbia. This increases the likelihood that Smith’s var. occidentalis will also match T. dulciolens. What happens then? Does T. dulciolens become a synonym for the earlier taxon? Well, no. The rules give the first validly described species name priority over an earlier variety name. Therefore, even if Smith’s taxon were transferred from Armillaria to Tricholoma and raised to species level, the mushroom first described by Smith will continue to be known as T. dulciolens. We found only a single clade of “Tricholoma calgatum” in North America, but Ovrebo, Hughes and Halling, using material not available from UNITE/GenBak, reported two clades, one from each side of the Continental Divide.6 The collections from California and BC are the same as in our series, with which our and the European T. dulciolens match. The identity of their eastern clade is of interest, in view of other earlier descriptions of “T. caligatum” taxa in North America, and that of a provisional new caligatoid species in Europe. Tricholoma magnivelare At last! Here is a species with a very securely applied name! After all, it is a species exclusive to North America, and all authorities are agreed that this is the species that grows on the Pacific coast. All nuclear studies show that organism to be a good species, distinct from others on the continent. So, its name must be safe, right? Not so. Note the distribution of

total from NA origin known west NA East NA

T. matT. magsutake nivelare 168 28 5 28 5 15 0 5

15 0

Table 1. Tricholoma matsutake and T. magnivelare collections from the UNITE database, with our 2 T. matsutake added. 5 and 28 collections, respectively, came from North America. We were able to trace the origin of 5 and 15 of these, respectively. All 5 T. matsutake came from eastern NA and all 15 T. magnivelare from the west. The difference in distribution of the two species, as seen with these collections, is statistically extremely significant (p=0.0001). This means that it is extremely unlikely that the difference in observed distribution is due to chance. In other words, it is extremely unlikely that if one of these species is found in the east, it will also be found in the west. Therefore, if Peck described an eastern species as T. magnivelare, it is extremely likely (9,999 to 1) that a similar mushroom in the west is a different species.

these collections on Figure 3. The odds are good that the name, Tricholoma magnivelare, currently used for the species of the Pacific coast is misapplied. Charles Horton Peck described a new mushroom species from Copake, NY, as Agaricus (Armillaria) ponderosus in 1874,7 and corrected that to Agaricus (Armillaria) magnivelaris in 1878, because the previous name was taken.8 It was transferred to Tricholoma as T. magnivelare by Redhead.9 Data in Table 1 shows that statistically it is extremely unlikely that Peck’s species, found in eastern North America, is the same as the species in the west. Rather, it is highly likely that Peck collected a typical eastern North American pale T. matsutake. If this were to be confirmed, discussion

Figure 1. Alexander Hanchett Smith, who first described Armillaria caligata var. occidentalis. He may wonder whether Kytövouri’s Tricholoma dulciolens will turn out to be the same species. Probably it will.

Figure 2. Charles Horton Peck might wonder whether he really found a North American Pacific coast mushroom in New York State. Probably he did not.

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Figure 3. NA distribution of the three boreal species of Tricholoma section Caligatum in our phylogram, using their current majority-rule consensus names. Map (adapted) of the primary ecoregions of North America courtesy of the Commission for Environmental Cooperation.

coasts of the continent. Pink splash represents approximate location of Smith’s Armillaria caligatum var. occidentalis type collection.

west forested mountain).

The red splash indicates the approximate location of Peck’s collection that he named Armillaria ponderosum, corrected to A. magnivelaris, whose taxonomically correct name is now accepted to be Tricholoma magnivelare. What are the odds that study of Peck’s type specimen will show it to match the yellow rather than the brown splashes?

Yellow splashes indicate the approximate locations of all known North American collections of the species that matches what is curBrown splashes indicate rently known as Tricholoma approximate locations matsutake. All are from the of the species in section Caligatum that is limited to east, with no records west of (or even near) the Misthe North American west sissippi River. Although the (currently named TrichoPurplish splashes represent loma magnivelare). All but number of records is low, it the approximate locations one were to the west of the is significant that not one of I am willing to wager a the very many collections of collections of Tricholoma Continental Divide. The toonie (a Canadian coin of dulciolens. The species has exception came from Colo- made in the west were of variable value) that this is been confirmed by sequenc- rado in a disjunct segment this entity. so. Any takers? ing from the east and west of similar ecoregion (North-

about the merits of nauseosum vs. matsutake becomes moot. Peck’s description predates all other descriptions of the species, and according to the rules, the tasty and lucrative mushroom of Eurasia and eastern North America, including our fair province, should then become known as T. magnivelare. Were that to happen, the similar mushroom in western North America that has up to then also used the name T. magnivelare, would now become nominally orphaned, hoping for adoption by an epithet with longer

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staying power. Fortunately, there is at least one waiting in the wings. In 1912 William Alphonso Murrill (Figure 4) reported a new mushroom, Armillaria arenicola, on the Pacific coast.10 Assistant director of the New York Botanical Gardens at the time, Murrill knew Peck’s Armillaria magnivelaris, and remarked on the similarity of that species to his new sand-dwelling (=arenicola) species. By the time it was recognized to be a Tricholoma, the name T. arenicola was no longer available. Rolf Singer (Figure 5) transferred

it to Tricholoma with a new name, Tricholoma murrillianum, to make sure that history recognized that the species was first described by Murrill, not him.11 As we say in NL, “proper thing.” Conclusions If these suspicions are right, the revised taxonomic landscape could look like this: 1. There is a good likelihood that Tricholoma dulciolens will prove to be the same species as Smith’s Armillaria caligata var. occidentalis.


This can be confirmed by examining Smith’s type species. If it matches T. dulciolens, Smith would be recognized as the first to describe the species. A new combination to Tricholoma (as T. caligatum var. occidentalis) and elevation to species level (as T. occidentalis), with a special appeal to reinstate Smith’s epithet may bring about a change in name. The best chance for such an appeal to succeed, would be its proposal by Ilkka Kytövuori. Barring that, the name T. dulciolens is likely to remain, and due to a technicality the man who first described it will not be associated with its name. The nature, placement and relationship of the second (eastern) caligatum clade reported by Ovrebo and coworkers6 remains to be seen. 2. There is a good likelihood that Tricholoma magnivelare, described by Peck, will prove to be the eastern North American species of sect. Caligatum that we now know as a pale T. matsutake. This can be confirmed by examining Peck’s type species. More analyses with a multigene technique should show whether it is T. matsutake or a species derived from T. matsutake. If the former, the species hitherto known as Tricholoma matsutake (= T. nauseosum) should be corrected to T. magnivelare, and the Pacific coast species hitherto known as T. magnivelare should be renamed. If it turns out to be a derived species, the same applies, except that the Eurasian T. matsutake will be able to keep its name. 3. There is a good likelihood that the species described by Murrill as Armillaria arenicola, and subsequently renamed by Singer as Tricholoma murillianum, is the sect. Caligatum species of the Pacific coast, presently erroneously known

as T. magnivelare. This can be confirmed by examining Murrill’s type specimen. If it matches the Pacific coast species (and differs from Peck’s type species), what has hitherto been called T. magnivelare should be corrected to T. murrillianum. Acknowledgments These speculations would not be possible without the work of my coauthors in the previous article. Especially vital to this speculation is the work of Tobias Frøslev, who created a phylogeny for section Caligatum from all sequences available in UNITE. Tobias also contributed the concept of majority-rule nomenclature to the results of the previous article. I am indebted to all my previous coauthors for spirited discussion of this article. While recognizing their contribution to the present speculations, should my speculations prove erroneous, the responsibility rests with the speculator, not those whose work provided the seed.

References Blytt A: Skrifter udgivne af VidenskabsSelskabet i Christiania. MatematiskNaturvidenskabelig Klasse 6:22. 1905. 2. Kytövuori I: The Tricholoma caligatum group in Europe and North Africa. Karstenia 28:65-77. 1988. 3. Ito S, Imai S: On the taxonomy of shiitake and matsutake. Botanical Magazine, 39:219-328. 1925. 4. Singer R: Das System der Agaricales. III. Annales mycologici 41:1-189. 1943. 5. Smith AH: The stirps Caligata of Armillaria in North America. Sydowia Beiheft 7:368-377. 1979. 6. Ovrebo CL, Hughes KW, Halling RE: A preliminary phylogeny of Tricholoma based on the rRNA ITS region. Inoculum 60(3):33. 2009. 7. Peck CH: Descriptions of new species of fungi. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences 1:41-72. 1874. 8. Peck CH: Report of the Botanist. Annual Report of the New York State Museum of Natural History. 29:66. 1878. 9. Redhead SA: Mycological observations 13-14: on Hypsizygus and Tricholoma. Transactions of the Mycological Society of Japan 25:1-9. 1984. 10. Murrill WA: The Agaricaceae of the Pacific coast: 1 white-spored genera. Mycologia 4:205-217. 1912. 11. Singer R: Tricholoma murillianum Singer. Lloydia 5:113. 1942. 1.

Figure 4. William Alphonso Murrill. Public domain photo from the internet. Murrill described the sand-dwelling Armillaria arenicola on the Pacific coast and thought it different from the similar Armillaria magnivelaris described by Peck. He should be greatly pleased at the honourable way Rolf Singer solved the taxonomic problems presented by the name.

Figure 5. Rolf Singer, grinning over a bouquet of shimeji. Photo courtesy of Gary Lincoff. When he learned that Murrill’s Armillaria arenicola was a Tricholoma, but that the name T. arenarium had already been used, Singer renamed it Tricholoma murrillianum, to ensure Murrill be recognized as the first to describe the species.

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The Bishop’s Sketchbook

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New trichs for Newfoundland Steve Trudell, Gro Gulden

The 2012 Foray Newfoundland-Labrador (FNL) was notable for the welcome abundance of mushrooms in and around Terra Nova National Park [Foray Report: OMPHALINA 3(12)]. With the event occurring a bit later than normal, the well-stocked display tables contained quite a number of species that fruit toward the end of the season, including an abundance of tricholomas—about 30 different ones, in fact (Table 1). This is particularly impressive when one considers that the cumulative FNL list for 2003 through 2011 contained only 28 species of Tricholoma. Unfortunately, Tricholoma is one of many genera that have not been sufficiently studied in North America, even though most tricholomas are relatively large conspicuous mushrooms. Thus, many Tricholoma species concepts are not well defined or widely understood, and so many of the species are not well known. This is due in large part to the fact that most of the features used to define the species are gradational ones, and often rather subtle ones. For instance, one important character in many groups of Tricholoma is whether the cap surface is shiny (e.g. T. portentosum) or matte (e.g. T. terreum). In moist weather the shiny species are viscid while the matte ones are not. In addition, until recently, readily available literature and images for North America have been lacking, so identifying tricholomas has often been difficult and sometimes impossible. Since the foray, the situation has been improved by the appearance of three new Tricholoma books. Two are European (The Genus Tricholoma

by Christensen & Heilmann-Clausen, and The Genus Tricholoma in Britain by Kibby) and one is North American (Tricholomas of North America: A Mushroom Field Guide by Bessette, Bessette, Roody and Trudell). Even with these valuable new resources, it still is hard to know whether the North American fungi to which we apply European names really ought to carry those names. Perhaps our species are different and deserve names of their own. Molecular methods have begun to address this problem, and some results, including a preliminary phylogenetic tree for Tricholoma based on ITS data, are provided in the book by Christensen & Heilmann-Clausen. However, until expanded molecular data are available for a wider range of species, we stick to a more pragmatic grouping of the species. In this and the accompanying articles about the local matsutake complex, we will deal with the tricholomas, or Tricholoma names, that were recorded for the first time during the 2012 foray. Our

approach will be to refer each new species name on the list to one of the following five groups within Tricholoma — the “gray ones,” “brown ones,” “colorful ones,” “whitish ones,” and a “miscellaneous” group—highlighting features that characterize the new species for the group. These informal, or “artificial,” groups are often used for convenience in Tricholoma literature but, in many cases they do not reflect the likely evolutionary relationships among the species. But first, let’s briefly review what makes a tricholoma a tricholoma. The current concept of Tricholoma differs little from Elias Fries’s 1820’s view of it—fleshy terrestrial mushrooms with a white spore-print and (mostly) notched (or sinuate or emarginate) gill attachment (Figure 1). However, many species that Fries would have considered to belong in Tricholoma have been moved to other genera based largely on microscopic features. Thus, all remaining trichs have smooth, non-amyloid spores and parallel gill trama. The typical

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Figure 1. Examples of gill attachment types. Illustration: Marsha Mello.

FREE

ADNATE

ADNEXED

NOTCHED

DECURRENT

emarginate/sinuate Table 1. Tricholomas identified to date by Foray Newfoundland & Labrador. Species new to the cumulative list are marked with a pink X. These are the species described in this article. Species Authority FNL 2003-2011 FNL 2012 Gray Group Tricholoma atrodiscum Tricholoma atrosquamosum Tricholoma myomyces Tricholoma cf. nigrum Tricholoma pardinum Tricholoma portentosum Tricholoma scalpturatum Tricholoma terreum Tricholoma sp. “unearthly” Tricholoma virgatum Brown Group Tricholoma albobrunneum Tricholoma caligatum Tricholoma dulciolens Tricholoma flavobrunneum Tricholoma focale Tricholoma fulvum Tricholoma imbricatum Tricholoma inodermeum Tricholoma matsutake Tricholoma pessundatum Tricholoma stans Tricholoma transmutans Tricholoma ustale Tricholoma vaccinum Colorful Group Tricholoma arvernense Tricholoma davisiae Tricholoma equestre Tricholoma flavum Tricholoma fumosoluteum Tricholoma guldeniae Tricholoma intermedium Tricholoma leucophyllum Tricholoma luridum Tricholoma subsejunctum Tricholoma viridilutescens White Group Tricholoma columbetta Tricholoma inamoenum Miscellaneous Group Tricholoma apium Tricholoma roseoacerbum Tricholoma saponaceum

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Ovrebo (Chevalier) Saccardo (Persoon) J.E. Lange Shanks & Ovrebo (Persoon) Quélet (Fries) Quélet (Fries) Quélet (Schaeffer) P. Kummer (Fries) P. Kummer (Persoon) P. Kummer (Viviani) Ricken Kytövuori (Fries) P. Kummer (Fries) Ricken (Bulliard) Saccardo (Fries) P. Kummer (Fries) Gillet (S. Ito & S. Imai) Singer (Fries) Quélet (Fries) Saccardo Peck (Fries) P. Kummer (Schaeffer) P. Kummer Bon Peck (Linnaeus) P. Kummer P. Kummer Peck Mort. Christensen Peck Ovrebo & Tylutki (Schaeffer) P. Kummer Peck Moser (Fries) P. Kummer (Fries) Quélet Jül. Schaffer A. Riva (Fries) P. Kummer

X X X X X X X X X

X X X X

X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X

X X X X X X X X X X X X X

X X

X

X X

X

X X X

tricholoma stature features a broadly umbonate cap that is often quite wide relative to the length of the stem, and a “gutter” around the stem formed by the notched gills. While most trichs lack rings and veils, some do have a well developed ring and others have a thin partial veil (cortina), at least when young. Many have a distinct border between a white zone at the top of the stem and the more or less capcolored lower part, indicating that a continuous coating of cap and stem existed in young fruitbodies. Because the genus concept now is based in part on microscopic features (mostly their absence), sometimes it is necessary to use a microscope to be certain that you have a species of Tricholoma and not a species of Tricholomopsis, Melanoleuca, or another similar genus. Now, let’s look at the new-forNewfoundland trichs. As Table 1 shows, there were 11 new species identified in 2012: Tricholoma albobrunneum T. apium T. arvernense T. atrodiscum T. columbetta T. dulciolens T. guldeniae T. cf. nigrum T. roseoacerbum T. terreum T. viridilutescens. As you will see, not all of them may actually represent new species for the province.


Gray Group The following species of the gray group had been reported prior to the 2012 foray: T. atrosquamosum, T. myomyces, T. pardinum, T. portentosum, T. scalpturatum, Tricholoma sp. “unearthly” and T. virgatum. The newly added names are T. atrodiscum, T. cf. nigrum, and T. terreum. Tricholoma atrodiscum T. atrodiscum is a little-known dark scaly species that occurs in eastern Canada and perhaps beyond, primarily with conifers. Its gills often have a somewhat pinkish cast and its taste is very bitter. FNL collection TN1-265. Photo: Roger Smith, #9301.

Tricholoma cf. nigrum The name, T. nigrum, was applied to our several collections of this mushroom based on ST’s West Coast familiarity with that species. The cap of T. nigrum usually starts out nearly black and becomes lighter as it expands. The surface is usually a bit scaly and can also be a bit streaky, but not nearly as much as in T. virgatum. The stem and gills lack the yellowish discolorations typical of T. portentosum.

Its odor and taste are strongly farinaceous (mealy or somewhat like watermelon rind or cucumber). Microscopically it has a distinctive layer of more or less

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soap-bubble-like cells that underlies the cap cuticle. It is a conifer associate, so far only found on nutrient-poor, often sandy, soils. Originally described from Oregon, it has also been found in California and Washington. Thus, finding it in Newfoundland would extend its range from one side of North America to the other. Quite a leap! However, further post-foray microscopic examination of some of the FNL specimens showed that the spores were not quite right for T. nigrum so, for the time being,

Tricholoma terreum Here we are cheating a little. European mycologists hold differing opinions about the taxonomy of the trichs with a gray to brown, somewhat wooly-scaly cap, and grayish gills, including T. terreum and T. myomyces. Some feel there are two (or more) species whereas others, like the authors of the latest Tricholoma monograph (Christensen & Heilmann-Clausen) think there is only one. Those who believe that T. terreum and T. myomyces are separate species claim that the latter has a cobwebby partial veil (cortina) when young, whereas the former lacks a partial veil at all stages. All of the mushrooms in this bunch have

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we are qualifying our identification with a “cf.,” which stands for the Latin “confer” here meaning “compare with.” This could be the same species that has been called “unearthly trich” on the FNL list and/or “T. pseudoterreum” in Québec. We hope to continue working on this apparently common mushroom to confirm our tentative identification or provide a proper name for it. Photo: ST, FNL collection TN2-241.

mild to slightly farinaceous odor and taste, and some are considered a delicacy in Europe. Tricholoma terreum occurs with conifers whereas other similar species, mostly those with white gills that stain yellow, occur with broadleaved trees. The reason we are cheating is that in 2003-2011 this species was listed as T. myomyces, and, in 2012 we used T. terreum for (what is likely) the same species. The foray list has been updated, now calling all of them T. terreum. Photo: A. Voitk, Stuckless Pond trail, Gros Morne National Park, 22 Oct, 2012.


Brown Group The following species of the brown group had been reported prior to the 2012 foray: T. caligatum, T. flavobrunneum, T. focale, T. fulvum, T. imbricatum, T. inodermeum, T. matsutake, T. pessundatum, T. stans, T. transmutans, T. ustale, and T. vaccinum. The newly added species are T. albobrunneum and T. dulciolens.

Tricholoma albobrunneum T. albobrunneum is one of a number of reddish-browncapped species with more or less viscid caps. The species is best recognized by its radially fibrillose cap, the white zone at stem apex compared to the rest of the stem, which is brown fibrillose, and its occurrence with pines. Often it gets confused with other brown pine-associated species like T. pessundatum and T. stans, but the caps of these species are larger, not fibrillose, and are of a paler, more pinkish brown (note the reliance on gradational characters for telling them apart). In addition, the stems

of the latter two species are predominantly white with delicate brown fibrils. Still another brown pine-lover is T. batschii, called T. fracticum in the new North American book. It differs from the other three by having a partial veil, which can form a thin membranous ring when young. All of these have white or whitish flesh, which distinguishes them from species such as T. fulvum in which the flesh is at least somewhat yellowish. FNL collection TN1-082. Photo: Roger Smith, #8380.

Tricholoma dulciolens T. dulciolens is a slender-statured member of the matsutake group that was found quite near our lodgings on the final day of the foray. Given the great interest in matsutakes, we dealt with this species in a separate article on p. 5. Here is a small picture as a reminder. FNL collection TN6-079. Photo: Roger Smith, #9902.

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Colourful Group The following species of the colourful group had been reported prior to the 2012 foray: T. davisiae, T. equestre, T. flavum, T. fumosoluteum, T. intermedium, T. leucophyllum, T. luridum, and T. subsejunctum. The newly added names are T. arvernense, T. guldeniae and T. viridilutescens.

and now, in a leap across the continent, Newfoundland. It is a conifer associate in the group of species similar to T. sejunctum, a species that occurs with broadleaved trees in southern Europe. The deep golden cap with brownish, not blackish, fibrils and a stem that often is enlarged in the middle and may be reddish stained at the base, distinguish T. arvernense from other species in the group. Tricholoma arvernense T. arvernense is a European species that only recently has become recognized in North America. Initially identified through DNA analysis of a collection made in Idaho, it has since been found in Alaska, Washington, California,

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Upper photo: ST, Alaska; lower: Roger Smith, #9827, FNL collection TN3-063.


Tricholoma guldeniae This is another case where we are adding a name, but, again, probably not increasing the species count. T. guldeniae is another member of the T. sejunctum group and is somewhat similar to T. arvernense (see above) but paler yellowish, with grayish fibrils. It is more slender and sometimes develops small, bright violet stains (as on the stem of the specimen to the right). Named in honour of one of 2012’s guest foray mycologists and coauthor of this article, it would have been wonderful to

add this species to the FNL list. Unfortunately, although the material (one old battered mushroom) seemed to represent T. guldeniae, its condition made it too risky to add the name to the official list. Thus, this is a good candidate for FNL’s most-wanted list. Previously T. guldeniae was known as T. luridum, a name that is already on the list, so chances are great that the species does occur in Newfoundland and all we have done is correct a name. Photo: GG, Norway.

Tricholoma viridilutescens T. viridilutescens is another member of the T. sejunctum group. Described from Europe, it grows with conifers and has a viscid-shiny cap that is almost black at the center, black fibrillose over the rest, with bright yellow shades towards the margin. The gills are often serrate and stain yellowish near the cap margin. This name must be considered tentative as detailed comparisons between North American and European material have not been done. This is another case of a new name, not a new species: on the FNL list it has appeared with an earlier North American name, T. subsejunctum. Photo: ST, Alaska

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Whitish Group Only one species in the whitish group had been reported prior to 2012, T. inamoenum, and only one new species, T. columbetta, was added.

Tricholoma columbetta T. columbetta is a medium-sized, all-white European species with a distinct farinaceous odor and taste. It is usually found with oaks, beech, or birch and occasionally develops bright bluish or greenish stains at the base of the stem. Although it has often been reported from North America, this is one of many cases where a European name has been applied without careful comparison of material from the two continents. However, preliminary DNA analysis of a collection identified as the all-white, eastern North American

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T. subresplendens, found it to be extremely similar to T. columbetta collections from Europe. So, for now, it appears we are justified in calling the NL mushroom T. columbetta as it is the earlier name. Apart from the pale colour, T. columbetta has little in common with the other reported species of the whitish group, the stinking T. inamoenum. Photo: ST, North Carolina.


Miscellaneous Group Only one species in the miscellaneous group had been reported prior to 2012: T. saponaceum. The newly added species are T. apium and T. roseoacerbum. Tricholoma apium T. apium is little known in North America, although it is very distinctive and occurs widely across the northern part of the continent. Again, this is a European name and we need a confirmation of the identity of North American and European species. Its distinguishing characteristics are the yellowish brown, wooly cap surface that cracks like dried mud and the strong celery- or curry-like odor. Young specimens erupt from the ground almost white, then discolor yellow, and finally turn brown. In Europe, it occurs mainly in dry heath forest under pine. In North America, it has been found with various conifers in British Columbia, Washington, Michigan, Massachusetts, and now Newfoundland. Upper photo: ST, Washington State. Lower photo: Roger Smith, #9205, FNL coll. TN2-222. Tricholoma roseoacerbum T. roseoacerbum is a more pinkish-capped version of T. acerbum, both of which were described from Europe. Except for a bitter taste, it is a fairly nondescript conifer associate whose more distinctive characteristics are its very crowded gills, short stocky stature with the cap wider than the height of the stem, and the margin of the cap, which remains inrolled well into maturity. These characters are all shared with T. acerbum which, however, most often has a ribbed cap margin and occurs with hardwood. Photo: ST, FNL coll. TN1-014.

OMPHALINA 23


the mail bag or why the passenger pigeons assigned to serve the lavish Corporate and Editorial offices of

Thank you for the Gymnopus issue and congratulations on the new species. Very beautiful photos and informative content. Very. Your foray dates were not the best for us this year and we had planned to give it a miss. But seeing that Gros Morne was one of the few places where the new species was collected at foray time, we have rescheduled our activities and signed up, hoping to see this new species in its home grounds. Ed comment: That is the sort of dedication we like to see! A beacon and shining example to others you are. And, yes, the odds are good that you could meet this new species this year, introduced by somebody familiar with its good, if somewhat retiring, looks.

I missed meeting the famous Newfoundlandian naturalists Crow, Moose and Vixen while at your foray in 2012, and only came upon their article about lady’s-slippers and fungi now (OMPHALINA, 4(6):4). I was unable to find their e-mail addresses and I don’t do Facebook, so perhaps you can pass a message along ... I applaud their efforts to understand what in the world is going on among fungi and plants. But I caution them not to jump too quickly onto the “ash trees supporting orchid plants” notion. Now, it could well be true (and that would please me). But having the same fungus present in the roots of orchids and ashes is necessary, but not sufficient to conclude that the fungus is providing a functional link. That requires additional work (which the critters somewhat acknowledged, but still their dialogue left the impression that a link had been found). First, the finding of an AM fungus in the orchid is unusual—not sure if I have heard of it before. So I would first make sure the field collectors had the proper roots. Assuming they did, then next question would be whether said roots exhibited the features of AM, such as arbuscules. Ditto for the ash roots.

24 OMPHALINA

OMPHALINA get hernias

Second, the orchid has green leaves and so is capable of photosynthesis. So one would question whether it needs support from fungi after the germination and establishment phases. It’s not obvious that it would need support, but current thought is that many of the green species are likely to be mixotrophic, with a portion of their carbon coming from associated fungi—which to date have been found to be predominantly (exclusively???) ectomycorrhizal species. Presumably they change their fungi from Rhizoctonia types during germination and establishment to ecto types as they mature (or at least add the latter ones). Third, even if a connection can be verified, then one would need to demonstrate that it is functionally important to the plants, another not-so-easy thing to do. Hopefully their friend the Perfesser and Zoe the student will tackle this daunting challenge and add another example to the list of fungus networks in nature. Cheers! Steve Trudell, the Seattle Skeptic

Yes, the finding of AMF in orchid roots was indeed a surprise, but was supported with microscopic observations of what appear to vesicles (which, I agree, could be ???), but not arbuscules, in both sets of roots. But wait, it gets worse. Both roots also had sequences of ECTOMYCORRHIZAL fungi, which as you say is no surprise for the orchid, but was unsettling regarding the ash, which has been discounted by authorities greater than me as non-ecto, AMF only. What we cannot say is that any of these fungi were FORMING their mycorrhizae in said roots, only that their sequences were present in DNA extracts of washed roots, carefully collected and packaged and extracted separately. Is one plant supporting the other? Maybe not as an adult, as you say, but support in youth may also help explain the distribution of these orchid plants in the field— conspicuously surrounding black ash trees as Vixen pointed out. As with many stories, it is an interesting one but one that I would hesitate to announce as solved just yet. Perfesser Greg Thorn


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