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Volvariella surrecta

Volvariella surrecta
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Pluteaceae
Genus: Volvariella
Species:
V. surrecta
Binomial name
Volvariella surrecta
(Knapp) Singer (1951)
Synonyms[1][2]
  • Agaricus surrectus Knapp (1829)
  • Agaricus loveianus Berk. (1836)
  • Volvariopsis loweiana (Berk.) Murrill (1917)
  • Volvaria hypopithys subsp. loveiana (Berk.) Konrad & Maubl. (1924)
  • Volvaria surrecta (Knapp) Ramsb. (1942)
Volvariella surrecta
Gills on hymenium
Cap is convex or flat
Hymenium is free
Stipe has a volva
Spore print is pinkish-brown
Ecology is parasitic
Edibility is inedible

Volvariella surrecta, commonly known as the piggyback rosegill, is an agaric fungus in the family Pluteaceae. Although rare, the species is widely distributed, having been reported from Asia, North America, Northern Africa, Europe, and New Zealand. The fungus grows as a parasite on the fruit bodies of other gilled mushrooms, usually Clitocybe nebularis. V. surrecta mushrooms have white or greyish silky-hairy caps up to 8 cm (3.1 in) in diameter, and white gills that turns pink in maturity. The stipe, also white, is up to 9 cm (3.5 in) long, and has a sack-like volva at its base.

Taxonomy edit

 
Knapp's 1829 drawing of Agaricus surrectus

The species was first mentioned in scientific literature as Agaricus surrectus by English botanist John Leonard Knapp in his 1829 Journal of a Naturalist. Knapp described the species and illustrated it in a woodcut. He wrote:

We have even an agaric, with a bulbous root and downy pileus, that will spring from the smooth summit of another (agaricus caseus), which has a uniform footstalk, though not of common occurrence. Thus a plant, that itself arises from decay, is found to constitute a soil for another; and the termination of this chain of efficiency is hidden from us.[3]

Seven years later, Miles Berkeley described the fungus as Agaricus loveianus, not aware of Knapp's previous publication, and wrote that it was "a most elegant and curious species which ... appears not to have been hitherto noticed."[4] Berkeley's name was frequently used in literature to refer to the fungus for over a century rather than Knapp.[5] In his 1917 North American Flora, William Alphonso Murrill proposed a new name combination for the species based on Berkeley's name, Volvariopsis loweiana.[6] In 1942, John Ramsbottom discovered Knapp's image and description of the fungus, and realizing it referred to the same species as Berkeley's Agaricus loveianus, made the new combination Volvaria surrecta.[7] Rolf Singer transferred it to the genus Volvariella in 1951, giving it the name by which it is known presently.[8]

Molecular analysis of DNA sequences suggests that V. surrecta belongs to the Volvariella pusilla group—a grouping of related Volvariella species that produce small, white fruit bodies. In this analysis, V. surrecta formed a subclade with V. hypopithys.[9] Almost 90 years earlier, Paul Konrad and André Maublanc recognized the relatedness of these species, and proposed that V. surrecta should be considered a subspecies of V. hypopithys.[2][10]

The specific epithet surrecta is Latin for "to arise". Berkeley's epithet loveianus honors British naturalist and Reverend Richard Thomas Lowe.[5] The mushroom is commonly known as the piggyback rosegill.[11]

Description edit

 
The cap has a silky surface, with a yellowish to brownish center.

The fruit bodies of V. surrecta have caps that are initially ovoid (egg-shaped. Later they become bell-shaped or convex before flattening; reaching diameters of 2.5–8 cm (1.0–3.1 in). The cap sometimes has a shallow umbo, although the presence of this character is not consistent. The cap surface is dry and covered with long, silky hairs; the color is white to light gray, with a yellowish or brownish center. The gills are free from attachment to the stipe and are packed close together. They are initially white, later becoming pink.[12] There are many lamellulae (short gills that do not extend fully from cap margin to the stipe) interspersed between the gills.[13] The stipe is 4–9 cm (1.6–3.5 in) long by 4–12 mm (0.16–0.47 in) thick, and roughly equal in width throughout the length or somewhat thicker at the base. Its color is white to light gray, and the stipe surface is appressed-fibrillose, with a pruinose coating near the apex. The white volva measures 1.3–2.5 cm (0.5–1.0 in) high and 0.6–1.3 cm (0.2–0.5 in) broad, and has a lobed margin.[12] The mushroom is not edible.[11]

The color of the spore print is brownish-pink.[11] The spores are egg-shaped to oval, measuring 5.4–7.6 by 3.4–4.9 μm. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are club-shaped, four-spored, and measure 20–31 by 5–10 μm. The pleurocystidia (cystidia on the gill face) are fusoid-ventricose (distinctly enlarged in the middle and tapered toward both ends), sometimes with an elongated neck. The cheilocystidia (cystidia on the gill edge) are also fusoid-ventricose with a neck that is sometimes short and bulbous; they measure 25–50 by 6–20 μm. The hyphae do not have clamp connections.[12]

Similar species edit

Because of its occurrence on the fruit bodies of other agarics, V. surrecta is unlikely to be confused with other mushrooms. Other parasitic mushrooms include Asterophora species, but these have thick gills compared to the thin gills of V. surrecta.[14] Collybia species, including C. cookei, C. cirrhata and C. tuberosa are saprobic, and grow on the blackened, decayed remains of other agarics. Their fruit bodies are much smaller than V. surrecta, with cap diameters up to 2 cm (0.8 in).[15] Although some other Volvariella species have an appearance similar to V. surrecta, they grow in grass or in leaf litter.[11]

Habitat and distribution edit

 
Clitocybe nebularis is a common host for V. surrecta.

Volvariella surrecta grows parasitically on the fruit bodies of Clitocybe species, usually C. nebularis,[12] although it has been reported growing on Tricholoma species,[16] as well as Melanoleuca brevipes.[17] The mushrooms grow in clusters, and fruit in the summer and autumn.[18] The host mushroom is sometimes malformed and assumes an irregular appearance.[19] In an early publication, Charles Bagge Plowright commented "Berkeley's figure ... is rather misleading. So is that given by Knapp under the name Agaricus surrectus ..., inasmuchas they show the Agaric (A. nebularis), upon which it is parasitic, in a very robust condition. In my specimen the host (A. nebularis) was quite sodden and collapsed so as to be practically unrecognisable unless one had known what species to expect."[20]

Volvariella surrecta is a rare species, even though its major host is quite common; the conditions required for the parasite to produce fruit bodies are not well known.[16] Some authors have suggested that it may grow equally well as a parasite or a saprobe.[21] V. surrecta has been found on its host in several different habitat types, including birch woodlands, pine plantations, scrub, thickets of small trees or shrubs beside roads, and under brambles. No definite preference for soil type has been determined, having been found in sands, clay, gravels, and peat.[5] In 1867, Worthington George Smith reported that he had successfully cultivated the species by partially burying fruit bodies under water-soaked rotting fir leaves that were placed in a bell-glass in a warm room. According to his account, a white mycelium grew over the leaves and eventually formed small white pins (immature, undifferentiated fruit bodies) that grew into fully formed mushrooms about two weeks after starting.[22]

The geographical distribution of the fungus includes North America north of Mexico, Northern Africa, Europe, New Zealand,[11] and Asia (Amur region of Russia,[23] India,[24] and Korea[25]).

References edit

  1. ^ "Volvariella surrecta (Knapp) Singer 1951". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  2. ^ a b "Volvaria hypopithys subsp. loveiana (Berk.) Konrad & Maubl. 1924". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  3. ^ Knapp JL (1829). The Journal of A Naturalist. London, UK: J. Murray. pp. 377–9. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.26335.
  4. ^ Berkeley MJ (1836). The English Flora: Fungi. Vol. 5. p. 104.
  5. ^ a b c Wells S. (1998). "Volvariella surrecta – a note on its occurrence in Britain". Mycologist. 12 (4): 182–3. doi:10.1016/S0269-915X(98)80079-7.
  6. ^ Murrill WA (1917). North American Flora (PDF). Vol. 2. New York, New York: New York Botanical Garden. pp. 140–1.
  7. ^ Ramsbottom J. (1942). "Volvaria surrecta (Knapp) comb.nov". Transactions of the British Mycological Society. 25 (3): 326–8. doi:10.1016/s0007-1536(42)80022-4.
  8. ^ Singer R. (1949). The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy. Lilloa. Vol. 22 (2nd ed.). Weinheim, Germany: Cramer. p. 401.
  9. ^ Justo A, Vizzini A, Minnis AM, Menolli N Jr, Capelari M, Rodríguez O, Malysheva E, Contu M, Ghignone S, Hibbett DS (2011). (PDF). Fungal Biology. 115 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1016/j.funbio.2010.09.012. hdl:2318/74776. PMID 21215950. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-09-16. Retrieved 2012-07-09.
  10. ^ Konrad P, Maublanc A (1924). Icones Selectae Fungorum. Vol. 1. Paris, France: Lechevallier. p. 17:2.
  11. ^ a b c d e Roberts P, Evans S (2011). The Book of Fungi. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press. p. 321. ISBN 978-0226721170.
  12. ^ a b c d Shaffer R. (1957). "Volvariella in North America". Mycologia. 49 (4): 545–79 (see pp. 574–5). doi:10.2307/3756159. JSTOR 3756159.
  13. ^ Pegler DN, Legon NW (1998). "Profiles of fungi". Mycologist. 12 (4): 180–2. doi:10.1016/S0269-915X(98)80078-5.
  14. ^ Smith AH (1975). A Field Guide to Western Mushrooms. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. p. 172. ISBN 0-472-85599-9.
  15. ^ Knudsen H, Vesterhout J, eds. (2008). Funga Nordica. Copenhagen, Denmark: Nordsvamp. p. 403. ISBN 978-87-983961-3-0.
  16. ^ a b Moss M. (2005). "Volvariella surrecta – Piggyback Rosegill". Field Mycology. 6 (3): 83–4. doi:10.1016/S1468-1641(10)60316-7.
  17. ^ Celka D. (2000). "Volvariella surrecta: A new species in the mycoflora of Poland". Acta Mycologica. 35 (2): 153–56. doi:10.5586/am.2000.018. ISSN 0001-625X.
  18. ^ Miller HR, Miller OK (2006). North American Mushrooms: A Field Guide to Edible and Inedible Fungi. Guilford, Connecticut: Falcon Guide. p. 205. ISBN 0-7627-3109-5.
  19. ^ Harper ET (1916). "Two parasitic mushrooms". Mycologia. 8 (2): 65–72. doi:10.2307/3753429. JSTOR 3753429.
  20. ^ Plowright CB (1903). "Volvaria loveana". The Gardeners' Chronicle. 3. 34: 318.
  21. ^ Buller AHR (1909). Researches on Fungi. Vol. 3. London, UK: Longmans, Green. pp. 442–6.
  22. ^ Smith WG (1867). "On the artificial production of Agaricus (Volvaria) loveianus, Berk". Journal of Botany. 5: 365–7.
  23. ^ Taranina NA (2005). "Agaricoid basidiomycetes of forest stow "Muhinka" (Amur region)". Mikologiya i Fitopatologiya (in Russian). 39 (5): 55–63. ISSN 0026-3648.
  24. ^ Atri NS, Kour H (2005). "Some unrecorded wild mushrooms of Punjab, India". Mushroom Research. 14 (2): 56–9. ISSN 0972-4885.
  25. ^ Seok S-J, Kim Y-S, Lee K-J (1994). "Higher fungi in Mt. Chilgap". Korean Journal of Mycology. 22 (3): 209–15. ISSN 0253-651X.

External links edit

volvariella, surrecta, scientific, classification, domain, eukaryota, kingdom, fungi, division, basidiomycota, class, agaricomycetes, order, agaricales, family, pluteaceae, genus, volvariella, species, surrecta, binomial, name, knapp, singer, 1951, synonyms, a. Volvariella surrecta Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Fungi Division Basidiomycota Class Agaricomycetes Order Agaricales Family Pluteaceae Genus Volvariella Species V surrecta Binomial name Volvariella surrecta Knapp Singer 1951 Synonyms 1 2 Agaricus surrectus Knapp 1829 Agaricus loveianus Berk 1836 Volvariopsis loweiana Berk Murrill 1917 Volvaria hypopithys subsp loveiana Berk Konrad amp Maubl 1924 Volvaria surrecta Knapp Ramsb 1942 Volvariella surrectaMycological characteristicsGills on hymeniumCap is convex or flatHymenium is freeStipe has a volvaSpore print is pinkish brownEcology is parasiticEdibility is inedible Volvariella surrecta commonly known as the piggyback rosegill is an agaric fungus in the family Pluteaceae Although rare the species is widely distributed having been reported from Asia North America Northern Africa Europe and New Zealand The fungus grows as a parasite on the fruit bodies of other gilled mushrooms usually Clitocybe nebularis V surrecta mushrooms have white or greyish silky hairy caps up to 8 cm 3 1 in in diameter and white gills that turns pink in maturity The stipe also white is up to 9 cm 3 5 in long and has a sack like volva at its base Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Similar species 3 Habitat and distribution 4 References 5 External linksTaxonomy edit nbsp Knapp s 1829 drawing of Agaricus surrectusThe species was first mentioned in scientific literature as Agaricus surrectus by English botanist John Leonard Knapp in his 1829 Journal of a Naturalist Knapp described the species and illustrated it in a woodcut He wrote We have even an agaric with a bulbous root and downy pileus that will spring from the smooth summit of another agaricus caseus which has a uniform footstalk though not of common occurrence Thus a plant that itself arises from decay is found to constitute a soil for another and the termination of this chain of efficiency is hidden from us 3 Seven years later Miles Berkeley described the fungus as Agaricus loveianus not aware of Knapp s previous publication and wrote that it was a most elegant and curious species which appears not to have been hitherto noticed 4 Berkeley s name was frequently used in literature to refer to the fungus for over a century rather than Knapp 5 In his 1917 North American Flora William Alphonso Murrill proposed a new name combination for the species based on Berkeley s name Volvariopsis loweiana 6 In 1942 John Ramsbottom discovered Knapp s image and description of the fungus and realizing it referred to the same species as Berkeley s Agaricus loveianus made the new combination Volvaria surrecta 7 Rolf Singer transferred it to the genus Volvariella in 1951 giving it the name by which it is known presently 8 Molecular analysis of DNA sequences suggests that V surrecta belongs to the Volvariella pusilla group a grouping of related Volvariella species that produce small white fruit bodies In this analysis V surrecta formed a subclade with V hypopithys 9 Almost 90 years earlier Paul Konrad and Andre Maublanc recognized the relatedness of these species and proposed that V surrecta should be considered a subspecies of V hypopithys 2 10 The specific epithet surrecta is Latin for to arise Berkeley s epithet loveianus honors British naturalist and Reverend Richard Thomas Lowe 5 The mushroom is commonly known as the piggyback rosegill 11 Description edit nbsp The cap has a silky surface with a yellowish to brownish center The fruit bodies of V surrecta have caps that are initially ovoid egg shaped Later they become bell shaped or convex before flattening reaching diameters of 2 5 8 cm 1 0 3 1 in The cap sometimes has a shallow umbo although the presence of this character is not consistent The cap surface is dry and covered with long silky hairs the color is white to light gray with a yellowish or brownish center The gills are free from attachment to the stipe and are packed close together They are initially white later becoming pink 12 There are many lamellulae short gills that do not extend fully from cap margin to the stipe interspersed between the gills 13 The stipe is 4 9 cm 1 6 3 5 in long by 4 12 mm 0 16 0 47 in thick and roughly equal in width throughout the length or somewhat thicker at the base Its color is white to light gray and the stipe surface is appressed fibrillose with a pruinose coating near the apex The white volva measures 1 3 2 5 cm 0 5 1 0 in high and 0 6 1 3 cm 0 2 0 5 in broad and has a lobed margin 12 The mushroom is not edible 11 The color of the spore print is brownish pink 11 The spores are egg shaped to oval measuring 5 4 7 6 by 3 4 4 9 mm The basidia spore bearing cells are club shaped four spored and measure 20 31 by 5 10 mm The pleurocystidia cystidia on the gill face are fusoid ventricose distinctly enlarged in the middle and tapered toward both ends sometimes with an elongated neck The cheilocystidia cystidia on the gill edge are also fusoid ventricose with a neck that is sometimes short and bulbous they measure 25 50 by 6 20 mm The hyphae do not have clamp connections 12 Similar species edit Because of its occurrence on the fruit bodies of other agarics V surrecta is unlikely to be confused with other mushrooms Other parasitic mushrooms include Asterophora species but these have thick gills compared to the thin gills of V surrecta 14 Collybia species including C cookei C cirrhata and C tuberosa are saprobic and grow on the blackened decayed remains of other agarics Their fruit bodies are much smaller than V surrecta with cap diameters up to 2 cm 0 8 in 15 Although some other Volvariella species have an appearance similar to V surrecta they grow in grass or in leaf litter 11 Habitat and distribution edit nbsp Clitocybe nebularis is a common host for V surrecta Volvariella surrecta grows parasitically on the fruit bodies of Clitocybe species usually C nebularis 12 although it has been reported growing on Tricholoma species 16 as well as Melanoleuca brevipes 17 The mushrooms grow in clusters and fruit in the summer and autumn 18 The host mushroom is sometimes malformed and assumes an irregular appearance 19 In an early publication Charles Bagge Plowright commented Berkeley s figure is rather misleading So is that given by Knapp under the name Agaricus surrectus inasmuchas they show the Agaric A nebularis upon which it is parasitic in a very robust condition In my specimen the host A nebularis was quite sodden and collapsed so as to be practically unrecognisable unless one had known what species to expect 20 Volvariella surrecta is a rare species even though its major host is quite common the conditions required for the parasite to produce fruit bodies are not well known 16 Some authors have suggested that it may grow equally well as a parasite or a saprobe 21 V surrecta has been found on its host in several different habitat types including birch woodlands pine plantations scrub thickets of small trees or shrubs beside roads and under brambles No definite preference for soil type has been determined having been found in sands clay gravels and peat 5 In 1867 Worthington George Smith reported that he had successfully cultivated the species by partially burying fruit bodies under water soaked rotting fir leaves that were placed in a bell glass in a warm room According to his account a white mycelium grew over the leaves and eventually formed small white pins immature undifferentiated fruit bodies that grew into fully formed mushrooms about two weeks after starting 22 The geographical distribution of the fungus includes North America north of Mexico Northern Africa Europe New Zealand 11 and Asia Amur region of Russia 23 India 24 and Korea 25 References edit Volvariella surrecta Knapp Singer 1951 MycoBank International Mycological Association Retrieved 2012 07 09 a b Volvaria hypopithys subsp loveiana Berk Konrad amp Maubl 1924 MycoBank International Mycological Association Retrieved 2012 07 09 Knapp JL 1829 The Journal of A Naturalist London UK J Murray pp 377 9 doi 10 5962 bhl title 26335 Berkeley MJ 1836 The English Flora Fungi Vol 5 p 104 a b c Wells S 1998 Volvariella surrecta a note on its occurrence in Britain Mycologist 12 4 182 3 doi 10 1016 S0269 915X 98 80079 7 Murrill WA 1917 North American Flora PDF Vol 2 New York New York New York Botanical Garden pp 140 1 Ramsbottom J 1942 Volvaria surrecta Knapp comb nov Transactions of the British Mycological Society 25 3 326 8 doi 10 1016 s0007 1536 42 80022 4 Singer R 1949 The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy Lilloa Vol 22 2nd ed Weinheim Germany Cramer p 401 Justo A Vizzini A Minnis AM Menolli N Jr Capelari M Rodriguez O Malysheva E Contu M Ghignone S Hibbett DS 2011 Phylogeny of the Pluteaceae Agaricales Basidiomycota taxonomy and character evolution PDF Fungal Biology 115 1 1 20 doi 10 1016 j funbio 2010 09 012 hdl 2318 74776 PMID 21215950 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 16 Retrieved 2012 07 09 Konrad P Maublanc A 1924 Icones Selectae Fungorum Vol 1 Paris France Lechevallier p 17 2 a b c d e Roberts P Evans S 2011 The Book of Fungi Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press p 321 ISBN 978 0226721170 a b c d Shaffer R 1957 Volvariella in North America Mycologia 49 4 545 79 see pp 574 5 doi 10 2307 3756159 JSTOR 3756159 Pegler DN Legon NW 1998 Profiles of fungi Mycologist 12 4 180 2 doi 10 1016 S0269 915X 98 80078 5 Smith AH 1975 A Field Guide to Western Mushrooms Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press p 172 ISBN 0 472 85599 9 Knudsen H Vesterhout J eds 2008 Funga Nordica Copenhagen Denmark Nordsvamp p 403 ISBN 978 87 983961 3 0 a b Moss M 2005 Volvariella surrecta Piggyback Rosegill Field Mycology 6 3 83 4 doi 10 1016 S1468 1641 10 60316 7 Celka D 2000 Volvariella surrecta A new species in the mycoflora of Poland Acta Mycologica 35 2 153 56 doi 10 5586 am 2000 018 ISSN 0001 625X Miller HR Miller OK 2006 North American Mushrooms A Field Guide to Edible and Inedible Fungi Guilford Connecticut Falcon Guide p 205 ISBN 0 7627 3109 5 Harper ET 1916 Two parasitic mushrooms Mycologia 8 2 65 72 doi 10 2307 3753429 JSTOR 3753429 Plowright CB 1903 Volvaria loveana The Gardeners Chronicle 3 34 318 Buller AHR 1909 Researches on Fungi Vol 3 London UK Longmans Green pp 442 6 Smith WG 1867 On the artificial production of Agaricus Volvaria loveianus Berk Journal of Botany 5 365 7 Taranina NA 2005 Agaricoid basidiomycetes of forest stow Muhinka Amur region Mikologiya i Fitopatologiya in Russian 39 5 55 63 ISSN 0026 3648 Atri NS Kour H 2005 Some unrecorded wild mushrooms of Punjab India Mushroom Research 14 2 56 9 ISSN 0972 4885 Seok S J Kim Y S Lee K J 1994 Higher fungi in Mt Chilgap Korean Journal of Mycology 22 3 209 15 ISSN 0253 651X External links editVolvariella surrecta in Index Fungorum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Volvariella surrecta amp oldid 1194751502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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