fbpx
Wikipedia

Mycena chlorophos

Mycena chlorophos is a species of agaric fungus in the family Mycenaceae. First described in 1860, the fungus is found in subtropical Asia, including India, Japan, Taiwan, Polynesia, Indonesia, and Sri Lanka, in Australia, and Brazil. Fruit bodies (mushrooms) have pale brownish-grey sticky caps up to 30 mm (1.2 in) in diameter atop stems 6–30 mm (0.2–1.2 in) long and up to a millimeter thick. The mushrooms are bioluminescent and emit a pale green light. Fruiting occurs in forests on fallen woody debris such as dead twigs, branches, and logs. The fungus can be made to grow and fruit in laboratory conditions, and the growth conditions affecting bioluminescence have been investigated.

Mycena chlorophos
In Hachijō-jima botanical park, Japan
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Mycenaceae
Genus: Mycena
Species:
M. chlorophos
Binomial name
Mycena chlorophos
Synonyms[1][2]
  • Agaricus chlorophos Berk. & M.A.Curtis (1860)
  • Agaricus cyanophos Berk. & M.A. Curtis (1860)

Taxonomy edit

The species was first described scientifically by Miles Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis in 1860 as Agaricus chlorophos.[3] The original specimens were collected from the Bonin Islands by American botanist Charles Wright in October 1854 as part of the North Pacific Exploring and Surveying Expedition of 1853–56.[2] Pier Andrea Saccardo transferred the species to the genus Mycena in an 1887 publication.[4] Daniel Desjardin and colleagues redescribed the species and set a lectotype specimen in 2010.[2]

In 1860, Berkeley and Curtis described the species Agaricus cyanophos from the material also collected from the Bonin Islands. This material was found near the location that the original specimens of M. chlorophos were found, but a couple of weeks later. Japanese mycologists Seiya Ito and Sanshi Imai studied these collections in the late 1930s, and concluded that Agaricus cyanophos was the same species as M. chlorophos, despite differences in cap shape, gill attachment, and the color of emitted light. Desjardin and colleagues agreed with this determination after examining the type material of both taxa. M. chlorophos is classified in the section Exornatae of the genus Mycena. Other luminescent species in this section are M. discobasis and M. marginata.[2] Some authors have considered M. illuminans to be synonymous with M. chlorophos due to their morphological similarity, but molecular analysis has shown that they are distinct species.[5]

In Japan, the mushroom is known as yakoh-take, or "night-light mushroom".[6] In the Bonin Islands, it is called "Green Pepe".[6]

Description edit

Mycena chlorophos
 Gills on hymenium
   Cap is conical or flat
   Hymenium is free or adnexed
 Stipe is bare
 
Spore print is white
 Ecology is saprotrophic
 Edibility is unknown

The cap is initially convex before flattening out (sometimes forming a central depression), and measures up to 30 mm (1.2 in) in diameter. The cap has radial grooves extending to nearly the center, and sometimes develops cracks in the margin, which has small rounded teeth. Its color is pale brownish gray that fades after expansion, and it is somewhat sticky. The white stem is 6–30 mm (0.24–1.18 in) long by 0.3–1 mm thick, hollow, and translucent. It has tiny hairs on the surface. The base of the stem is disc-shaped or somewhat bulbous, measuring 1–2.5 mm wide. The thin gills are free from attachment to the stem, or are adnexed (narrowly attached) to a slight collar encircling the stem. Initially white then grayish in color, they are somewhat crowded, with 17–32 full-length gills and 1 to 3 tiers of lamellulae (shorter gills that do not extend fully from the cap margin to the stem). The gills are 0.3–1 mm wide with micaceous edges. The flesh is very thin, and has a strong odor of ammonia. Both the caps and the gills are bioluminescent, while the mycelia and stems have little to no luminescence.[7]

The spores are white, smooth, roughly elliptical, and have dimensions of 7–8.5 by 5–6 μm. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are 17–23 by 7.5–10 μm, and four-spored with sterigmata around 3 μm long. The paraphyses are 5–8 μm wide, shorter than the basidia, more abundant and form a somewhat gelatinous layer. The cheilocystidia (cystidia on the cap edge) are 60 by 7–21 μm, hyaline, conical or ventricose (inflated). The tips of the cheilocystidia are drawn out to a point, or have a short appendage measuring 15 by 2–3 μm, which is sometimes branched, and is thin or slightly thick-walled. There are no cystidia on the gill face (pleurocystidia). Pileocystidia (cystidia on the surface of the cap) are club-shaped, measuring 25–60 by 13–25 μm. They are somewhat thick-walled, and spiny on the exposed surface with short simple outgrowths extending up to 3 μm long. The pileocystidia are joined together and form a continuous layer over the young cap, but break up as the cap expands. The caulocystidia (cystidia on the stem) are conical or lance-shaped, hyaline, and smooth, with walls that are thin or slightly thickened. They measure up to 300 by 10–25 μm, but are shorter in the upper regions of the stem.[7] Clamp connections are present in the hyphae of all tissues.[2]

Similar species edit

The two other luminescent species of Mycena section Exornatae are similar in appearance to M. chlorophos. M. discobasis fruit bodies have paler caps; microscopically, they have larger spores measuring 9.9 by 6.7 μm, and lack the short apical appendage found on M. chlorophos cheilocystidia. M. margarita has smaller spores averaging 6.9 by 4.4 μm, smaller cheilocystidia, and loop-like clamp connections.[2]

Habitat and distribution edit

Fruit bodies of Mycena chlorophos are found in forests, where they grow in groups on woody debris such as fallen twigs, branches, and bark.[8] In the Japanese Hachijo and Bonin Islands, mushrooms occur predominantly on decaying petioles of the palm Phoenix roebelenii. The fungus requires a proper range of humidity to form mushrooms; for example, on Hachijo Island, fruiting only occurs in the rainy seasons in June/July and September/October when the relative humidity is around 88%, usually the day after rain falls.[6][9] Experimental studies have shown that mushroom primordia that are too wet become deformed, while conditions that are too dry cause the caps to warp and break because the delicate gelatinous membrane covering them is broken.[6]

In Asia, the species has been found in Japan, Taiwan, Polynesia, Java, and Sri Lanka.[8] In Japan, the fungus is becoming more scarce as its natural habits are decreasing.[6] Several Australian field guides have reported the species from that country. The fungus has also been recorded several times from Brazil.[2] Mycena chlorophos was one of several fungi featured in a set of postage stamps issued in Samoa in 1985.[10]

Bioluminescence studies edit

Since the mushroom is small, and fruits in only a limited season in a small area, researchers have investigated the conditions needed to artificially cultivate the species in laboratory conditions, in order to have more material to study the mechanism of bioluminescence, and to help preserve the species. The optimum temperature for the growth of mycelia is 27 °C (81 °F), while the optimum for the growth of primordia is 21 °C (70 °F). These temperatures are consistent with the subtropical climate in which the species is typically found. Maximum luminescence occurs at 27 °C, and about 25–39 hours after the primordia begin to form, when the cap has fully expanded. At 21 °C, luminescence persists for about 3 days, and becomes undetectable to the naked eyes about 72 hours after primordium initiation.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mycena chlorophos (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Sacc. 1887". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Desjardin DE, Lodge DJ, Stevani CV, Nagasawa E (2010). "Luminescent Mycena: new and noteworthy species". Mycologia. 102 (2): 459–77. doi:10.3852/09-197. PMID 20361513. S2CID 25377671.
  3. ^ Berkeley MJ, Curtis MA (1860). "Characters of new fungi, collected in the North Pacific Exploring Expedition by Charles Wright". Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 4: 111–30.
  4. ^ Saccardo PA. (1887). "Sylloge Hymenomycetum, Vol. I. Agaricineae". Sylloge Fungorum (in Latin). 5: 301.
  5. ^ Chew AL, Tan YS, Desjardin DE, Musa MY, Sabaratnam V (2013). "Taxonomic and phylogenetic re-evaluation of Mycena illuminans". Mycologia. 105 (5): 1325–35. doi:10.3852/13-009. PMID 23709573. S2CID 22546166.
  6. ^ a b c d e Niitsu H, Hanyuda N (2000). "Fruit-body production of a luminous mushroom, Mycena chlorophos". Mycoscience. 41 (6): 559–64. doi:10.1007/BF02460921. S2CID 84489071.
  7. ^ a b Corner EJH. (1954). "Further descriptions of luminous agarics". Transactions of the British Mycological Society. 37 (3): 256–71. doi:10.1016/s0007-1536(54)80009-x.
  8. ^ a b Hongo T. (1977). "Higher fungi of the Bonin Islands I" (PDF). Memoirs of the National Science Museum (Tokyo) (10): 31–42.
  9. ^ Mori K, Kojima S, Maki S, Hirano T, Niwa H (2011). "Bioluminescence characteristics of the fruiting body of Mycena chlorophos". Luminescence. 26 (6): 604–10. doi:10.1002/bio.1280. PMID 21370386.
  10. ^ Moss MO, Dunkley IP (1986). "Fungi of stamps 1984–1985". Bulletin of the British Mycological Society. 20 (1): 63–8. doi:10.1016/S0007-1528(86)80020-7.
  11. ^ Niitsu H, Hanyuda N, Sugiyama Y (2000). "Cultural properties of a luminous mushroom, Mycena chlorophos". Mycoscience. 41 (6): 551–8. doi:10.1007/BF02460920. S2CID 83627566.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Mycena chlorophos at Wikimedia Commons
  • Mycena chlorophos in Index Fungorum

mycena, chlorophos, species, agaric, fungus, family, mycenaceae, first, described, 1860, fungus, found, subtropical, asia, including, india, japan, taiwan, polynesia, indonesia, lanka, australia, brazil, fruit, bodies, mushrooms, have, pale, brownish, grey, st. Mycena chlorophos is a species of agaric fungus in the family Mycenaceae First described in 1860 the fungus is found in subtropical Asia including India Japan Taiwan Polynesia Indonesia and Sri Lanka in Australia and Brazil Fruit bodies mushrooms have pale brownish grey sticky caps up to 30 mm 1 2 in in diameter atop stems 6 30 mm 0 2 1 2 in long and up to a millimeter thick The mushrooms are bioluminescent and emit a pale green light Fruiting occurs in forests on fallen woody debris such as dead twigs branches and logs The fungus can be made to grow and fruit in laboratory conditions and the growth conditions affecting bioluminescence have been investigated Mycena chlorophos In Hachijō jima botanical park Japan Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Fungi Division Basidiomycota Class Agaricomycetes Order Agaricales Family Mycenaceae Genus Mycena Species M chlorophos Binomial name Mycena chlorophos Berk amp M A Curtis Sacc 1887 Synonyms 1 2 Agaricus chlorophos Berk amp M A Curtis 1860 Agaricus cyanophos Berk amp M A Curtis 1860 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Similar species 4 Habitat and distribution 5 Bioluminescence studies 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editThe species was first described scientifically by Miles Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis in 1860 as Agaricus chlorophos 3 The original specimens were collected from the Bonin Islands by American botanist Charles Wright in October 1854 as part of the North Pacific Exploring and Surveying Expedition of 1853 56 2 Pier Andrea Saccardo transferred the species to the genus Mycena in an 1887 publication 4 Daniel Desjardin and colleagues redescribed the species and set a lectotype specimen in 2010 2 In 1860 Berkeley and Curtis described the species Agaricus cyanophos from the material also collected from the Bonin Islands This material was found near the location that the original specimens of M chlorophos were found but a couple of weeks later Japanese mycologists Seiya Ito and Sanshi Imai studied these collections in the late 1930s and concluded that Agaricus cyanophos was the same species as M chlorophos despite differences in cap shape gill attachment and the color of emitted light Desjardin and colleagues agreed with this determination after examining the type material of both taxa M chlorophos is classified in the section Exornatae of the genus Mycena Other luminescent species in this section are M discobasis and M marginata 2 Some authors have considered M illuminans to be synonymous with M chlorophos due to their morphological similarity but molecular analysis has shown that they are distinct species 5 In Japan the mushroom is known as yakoh take or night light mushroom 6 In the Bonin Islands it is called Green Pepe 6 Description editMycena chlorophos nbsp Mycological characteristics nbsp Gills on hymenium nbsp nbsp Cap is conical or flat nbsp nbsp Hymenium is free or adnexed nbsp Stipe is bare nbsp Spore print is white nbsp Ecology is saprotrophic nbsp Edibility is unknown The cap is initially convex before flattening out sometimes forming a central depression and measures up to 30 mm 1 2 in in diameter The cap has radial grooves extending to nearly the center and sometimes develops cracks in the margin which has small rounded teeth Its color is pale brownish gray that fades after expansion and it is somewhat sticky The white stem is 6 30 mm 0 24 1 18 in long by 0 3 1 mm thick hollow and translucent It has tiny hairs on the surface The base of the stem is disc shaped or somewhat bulbous measuring 1 2 5 mm wide The thin gills are free from attachment to the stem or are adnexed narrowly attached to a slight collar encircling the stem Initially white then grayish in color they are somewhat crowded with 17 32 full length gills and 1 to 3 tiers of lamellulae shorter gills that do not extend fully from the cap margin to the stem The gills are 0 3 1 mm wide with micaceous edges The flesh is very thin and has a strong odor of ammonia Both the caps and the gills are bioluminescent while the mycelia and stems have little to no luminescence 7 The spores are white smooth roughly elliptical and have dimensions of 7 8 5 by 5 6 mm The basidia spore bearing cells are 17 23 by 7 5 10 mm and four spored with sterigmata around 3 mm long The paraphyses are 5 8 mm wide shorter than the basidia more abundant and form a somewhat gelatinous layer The cheilocystidia cystidia on the cap edge are 60 by 7 21 mm hyaline conical or ventricose inflated The tips of the cheilocystidia are drawn out to a point or have a short appendage measuring 15 by 2 3 mm which is sometimes branched and is thin or slightly thick walled There are no cystidia on the gill face pleurocystidia Pileocystidia cystidia on the surface of the cap are club shaped measuring 25 60 by 13 25 mm They are somewhat thick walled and spiny on the exposed surface with short simple outgrowths extending up to 3 mm long The pileocystidia are joined together and form a continuous layer over the young cap but break up as the cap expands The caulocystidia cystidia on the stem are conical or lance shaped hyaline and smooth with walls that are thin or slightly thickened They measure up to 300 by 10 25 mm but are shorter in the upper regions of the stem 7 Clamp connections are present in the hyphae of all tissues 2 Similar species editThe two other luminescent species of Mycena section Exornatae are similar in appearance to M chlorophos M discobasis fruit bodies have paler caps microscopically they have larger spores measuring 9 9 by 6 7 mm and lack the short apical appendage found on M chlorophos cheilocystidia M margarita has smaller spores averaging 6 9 by 4 4 mm smaller cheilocystidia and loop like clamp connections 2 Habitat and distribution editFruit bodies of Mycena chlorophos are found in forests where they grow in groups on woody debris such as fallen twigs branches and bark 8 In the Japanese Hachijo and Bonin Islands mushrooms occur predominantly on decaying petioles of the palm Phoenix roebelenii The fungus requires a proper range of humidity to form mushrooms for example on Hachijo Island fruiting only occurs in the rainy seasons in June July and September October when the relative humidity is around 88 usually the day after rain falls 6 9 Experimental studies have shown that mushroom primordia that are too wet become deformed while conditions that are too dry cause the caps to warp and break because the delicate gelatinous membrane covering them is broken 6 In Asia the species has been found in Japan Taiwan Polynesia Java and Sri Lanka 8 In Japan the fungus is becoming more scarce as its natural habits are decreasing 6 Several Australian field guides have reported the species from that country The fungus has also been recorded several times from Brazil 2 Mycena chlorophos was one of several fungi featured in a set of postage stamps issued in Samoa in 1985 10 Bioluminescence studies editSince the mushroom is small and fruits in only a limited season in a small area researchers have investigated the conditions needed to artificially cultivate the species in laboratory conditions in order to have more material to study the mechanism of bioluminescence and to help preserve the species The optimum temperature for the growth of mycelia is 27 C 81 F while the optimum for the growth of primordia is 21 C 70 F These temperatures are consistent with the subtropical climate in which the species is typically found Maximum luminescence occurs at 27 C and about 25 39 hours after the primordia begin to form when the cap has fully expanded At 21 C luminescence persists for about 3 days and becomes undetectable to the naked eyes about 72 hours after primordium initiation 11 See also edit nbsp Fungi portal List of bioluminescent fungiReferences edit Mycena chlorophos Berk amp M A Curtis Sacc 1887 MycoBank International Mycological Association Retrieved 2012 09 08 a b c d e f g Desjardin DE Lodge DJ Stevani CV Nagasawa E 2010 Luminescent Mycena new and noteworthy species Mycologia 102 2 459 77 doi 10 3852 09 197 PMID 20361513 S2CID 25377671 Berkeley MJ Curtis MA 1860 Characters of new fungi collected in the North Pacific Exploring Expedition by Charles Wright Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 4 111 30 Saccardo PA 1887 Sylloge Hymenomycetum Vol I Agaricineae Sylloge Fungorum in Latin 5 301 Chew AL Tan YS Desjardin DE Musa MY Sabaratnam V 2013 Taxonomic and phylogenetic re evaluation of Mycena illuminans Mycologia 105 5 1325 35 doi 10 3852 13 009 PMID 23709573 S2CID 22546166 a b c d e Niitsu H Hanyuda N 2000 Fruit body production of a luminous mushroom Mycena chlorophos Mycoscience 41 6 559 64 doi 10 1007 BF02460921 S2CID 84489071 a b Corner EJH 1954 Further descriptions of luminous agarics Transactions of the British Mycological Society 37 3 256 71 doi 10 1016 s0007 1536 54 80009 x a b Hongo T 1977 Higher fungi of the Bonin Islands I PDF Memoirs of the National Science Museum Tokyo 10 31 42 Mori K Kojima S Maki S Hirano T Niwa H 2011 Bioluminescence characteristics of the fruiting body of Mycena chlorophos Luminescence 26 6 604 10 doi 10 1002 bio 1280 PMID 21370386 Moss MO Dunkley IP 1986 Fungi of stamps 1984 1985 Bulletin of the British Mycological Society 20 1 63 8 doi 10 1016 S0007 1528 86 80020 7 Niitsu H Hanyuda N Sugiyama Y 2000 Cultural properties of a luminous mushroom Mycena chlorophos Mycoscience 41 6 551 8 doi 10 1007 BF02460920 S2CID 83627566 External links edit nbsp Media related to Mycena chlorophos at Wikimedia Commons Mycena chlorophos in Index Fungorum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mycena chlorophos amp oldid 1194760515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.