The Myxomycetes of the Miami Valley, Ohio - LightNovelsOnl.com
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I. DIDYMIUM, Schrad. Sporangium simple, subglobose and stipitate, the base commonly umbilicate, or sometimes sessile and plasmodiocarp; the wall a thin membrane with an outer layer of minute stellate crystals of lime. Stipe present or sometimes wanting; the columella mostly conspicuous, sometimes thin or obsolete. Capillitium of very slender threads, straight or often sinuous, stretching from the columella to the wall of the sporangium, simple or outwardly sparingly branched at a sharp angle. Spores globose, violaceous.
Didymium, together with Spumaria, is to be distinguished from all other genera of the Myxomycetes by the covering of stellate crystals, like h.o.a.r-frost, upon the outer surface of the sporangium.
--1. CIONIUM. Columella prominent, subcentral, globose, obovoid, or turbinate; the threads of the capillitium radiating in all directions to the wall of the sporangium.
_A. Sporangium stipitate._
1. DIDYMIUM SQUAMULOSUM, A. & S. Sporangium variable in form and size, small and globose, or large and much depressed, the base usually umbilicate, stipitate, or sometimes sessile, and even plasmodiocarp; the wall very thin and pellucid, with a thin, gray-white layer of stellate crystals of lime, breaking up into subpersistent scales. Stipe short, erect, snow-white, longitudinally furrowed or plicate; the columella central, snow-white, various in shape, globose, obovoid, turbinate, and stipitate or sessile. Capillitium of numerous colorless threads, radiating from the columella and separating outwardly into several branches. Spores globose, very minutely warted, dark violaceous, 8-10 mic. in diameter.
Growing on old wood, leaves, herbaceous stems, etc. Sporangium .4-.6-.8 mm. in diameter, the stipe scarcely longer than the diameter, often much shorter or nearly wanting.
2. DIDYMIUM PROXIMUM, B. & C. Sporangium globose or depressed-globose, the base more or less umbilicate, stipitate; the wall very thin and pellucid, with a loose white covering of stellate crystals of lime, the upper part breaking up and falling away. Stipe long, erect, tapering upward, yellow-brown to reddish-brown, expanding at the base into a small hypothallus; the columella central, white, turbinate, or discoid turbinate. Capillitium of slender, colorless threads, radiating from the columella, branching and often anastomosing. Spores globose, even, pale violaceous, 8-10 mic. in diameter. Plate XII, Fig. 37.
Growing on old leaves, sticks, culms, etc. Sporangium .4-.6 mm. in diameter, the stipe two or three times the diameter.
3. DIDYMIUM EXIMIUM, Peck. Sporangium depressed-globose, the base umbilicate, sometimes very much depressed and also umbilicate above, stipitate; the wall pale ocher or pale yellow, with a thin layer of minute white crystals of lime, the upper part gradually breaking away.
Stipe long, erect, tapering upward, pale yellow-brown, darker below, expanding into a small brown hypothallus; the columella central, large, discoid, or sometimes rough and irregular, pale ochre or yellowish.
Capillitium of much-branched colorless threads, radiating upward and downward from the columella. Spores globose, very minutely warted, dark violaceous, 9-11 mic. in diameter. Plate XII, Fig. 38.
Growing on old leaves, sticks, etc. Sporangium .5-.6 mm. in diameter, the stipe about twice the diameter.
4. DIDYMIUM MICROCARPUM, Fr. Sporangium small, globose, the base slightly umbilicate, stipitate; the wall a dark-colored membrane, covered with abundant snow-white crystals of lime. Stipe long, slender, erect, delicately striate, yellow-brown to blackish in color, expanded at the base into a small hypothallus; the columella small, globose, sessile or substipitate, pale yellow-brown. Capillitium of pale brown threads, somewhat branched and forming a loose net. Spores globose, very minutely warted, violaceous, 6-7 mic. in diameter.
Growing on old wood, leaves, mosses, etc. Sporangium .4-.5 mm. in diameter, the stipe two or three times as long. The species is more particularly distinguished by its small spores.
5. DIDYMIUM MINUS, Lister. Sporangium depressed-globose, the base umbilicate, stipitate, rarely sessile and plasmodiocarp; the wall a dark-colored membrane with a thin layer of stellate crystals of lime, breaking up gradually and falling away. Stipe erect or sometimes bent at the apex, variable in length, rarely wanting, from pale brown to blackish in color, rising from a small hypothallus; the columella reaching the center, brown or blackish, rough, convex, subglobose or pulvinate, substipitate. Capillitium of slender colorless threads, radiating from the columella and more or less branched outwardly. Spores globose, very minutely warted, violaceous, 8-10 mic. in diameter. Plate XII, Fig. 39.
Growing in vast abundance in Spring on old leaves, bark, wood, etc.
Sporangium .4-.6 mm. in diameter, the stipe scarcely longer but usually shorter than the diameter of the sporangium rarely absent. It is considered by Lister to be a variety of _D. farinaceum_; it differs from this species in its smaller and less-depressed sporangium and in its smaller nearly smooth spores.
_B. Sporangia sessile._
6. DIDYMIUM EFFUSUM, Link. Sporangia gregarious or scattered, sessile on a flattened base, convex above, various in shape, subrotund or by confluence effused and venosely creeping; the wall very thin and pellucid, invested with a thin flocculose layer of minute crystals of lime. The columella hemispheric, rugulose, usually snow-white.
Capillitium of very slender colorless threads, furnished with numerous minute protuberances, much branched and combined into a dense net.
Spores globose, very minutely warted, dark violaceous, 10-11 mic. in diameter.
Growing on old leaves, wood, etc. Sporangium about .5 mm. in diameter or thickness, sometimes confluent and more or less elongated as a plasmodiocarp. This species is reported from the United States, but I have seen no specimens.
7. DIDYMIUM PHYSAROIDES, Pers. Sporangia roundish or hemispheric, more or less irregular and deformed, sessile or with a very short stipe, and closely crowded together upon a strongly-developed common hypothallus; the wall a dark colored membrane, with a thin layer of stellate crystals of lime. The columella large and thick, divided into cells which are filled with irregular lumps of lime, common to all the sporangia.
Capillitium of stout threads, usually simple, only rarely branched, furnished with numerous fusiform swellings. Spores globose, minutely warted, dark violaceous, 12-14 mic. in diameter.
Growing on old wood, bark, moss, etc. Reported from Carolina by Curtis.
It is said superficially to resemble somewhat _Physarum didermoides_.
--2. PLACENTIA. Columella basal, much depressed, very thin or quite obsolete, connate with the base of the sporangium; the threads of the capillitium ascending to the wall of the sporangium.
_A. Sporangium stipitate._
8. DIDYMIUM FARINACEUM, Schrad. Sporangium hemispherical, more or less depressed, the base profoundly umbilicate; the wall firm, rugulose, dark-colored and nearly opaque, with a mealy coat of stellate crystals of lime, rupturing irregularly. Stipe variable in length, rigid, erect, black or sometimes rusty-brown, arising from a small hypothallus; the columella broad, hemispherical or pulvinate, black, the lower side connate with the wall of the sporangium. Capillitium of dark-colored sinuous threads, simple or scarcely branched. Spores globose, dark violaceous, minutely warted, 10-13 mic. in diameter. Plate XII, Fig. 40.
Growing on old wood, leaves, mosses, etc. Sporangium .6-.9 mm. in diameter, the stipe about as long as the diameter of the sporangium or sometimes much longer, usually, however, much shorter than the diameter and almost concealed within the umbilicus. My specimens are from Pennsylvania and Alabama. It is readily distinguished from _Didymium minus_ by the much larger and more distinctly warted spores.
9. DIDYMIUM CLAVUS, A. & S. Sporangium pileate, very much depressed, convex above and concave below, stipitate; the wall a dark-colored membrane, thickly covered with minute white crystals of lime, except the brown concavity underneath, the upper part breaking away, the lower persistent. Stipe short, erect, rugulose, brown or blackish, expanding at the base into a small hypothallus; the columella reduced to a thin layer of minute brown scales upon the base of the sporangium.
Capillitium of simple or sparingly-branched threads, colorless at the extremities and dark-colored between. Spores globose, even, violaceous, 6-8 mic. in diameter.
Growing on old leaves, sticks, herbaceous stems, etc. The sporangium .6-.8 mm. in diameter, the stipe about the same length. Fries considered this to be a mere variety of _D. farinaceum_, but it is readily distinguished by its very small spores.
_B. Sporangia sessile._
10. DIDYMIUM SERPULA, Fr. Plasmodium yellow. Plasmodiocarp much depressed, subrotund or usually more or less elongated, bent, flexuous and reticulate; the wall dark-colored, with a thin layer of stellate crystals of lime. Columella entirely wanting. Capillitium of very slender threads, extending from base to upper surface, much branched, the branches combined into a dense network; to these threads adhere numerous roundish vesicles, composed of a brownish membrane, inclosing a yellow coloring matter, the vesicles 30-50 mic. in diameter. Spores globose, very minutely warted, violaceous, 7-8 mic. in diameter.
Growing on old leaves, bark, etc. The plasmodiocarp .6-.8 mm. in thickness and extending from one to several millimeters in length. This species is reported from the United States by Ma.s.see. It ought to be readily recognized by its yellow plasmodium and the peculiar vesicles adherent to the capillitium.
11. DIDYMIUM ANELLUS, Morgan, n. sp. Plasmodiocarp in small rings or links, then confluent and elongated, irregularly connected together, bent and flexuous, resting on a thin venulose hypothallus; the wall firm, dark-colored, with a thin layer of stellate crystals of lime, irregularly ruptured. Columella merely a thin layer of brown scales.
Capillitium of slender dark-colored threads, which extend from base to wall, more or less branched, and combined into a loose net. Spores globose, very minutely warted, violaceous, 8-9 mic. in diameter. Plate XII, Fig. 41.
Growing on old leaves in woods in Spring. Plasmodiocarp in rings .3-.5 mm. in diameter, or often more or less elongated into links and chains, which are bent and flexed in quite an irregular manner, the thread or vein composing them about .2 mm. in thickness. A more minute species than _Didymium serpula_, without characteristic thickenings upon the threads of the capillitium, and wanting the peculiar large cells of this species.
II. SPUMARIA, Pers. aethalium composed of numerous elongated, irregularly-branched sporangia, more or less closely compacted together and confluent, seated upon a well-developed common hypothallus; the walls of the sporangia a thin membrane with an outer layer of minute, stellate crystals of lime. Each sporangium traversed by a central subcylindric hollow columella, which extends also to the branches, but does not reach to their apices. Capillitium of slender threads, more or less branched, and combined into a network. Spores globose, violaceous.
Spumaria is essentially related to Didymium by the crystals of lime upon the walls of the sporangia. Rostafinski's figure 158 can only be regarded as ideal or diagrammatic. I am disposed to question the existence of the central columella altogether; if it does exist, it must be extremely defective.
1. SPUMARIA ALBA, Bull. Plasmodium white, amplectant. aethalium variable in form and size, resting upon a white, membranaceous hypothallus, and usually covered by a white, friable, common cortex composed of minute crystals of lime. The component sporangia elongated, irregular, more or less branched, the branches rude, deformed, compressed, laterally confluent, obtuse or pointed at the apex; the walls of the sporangia thin and delicate, rugulose, pellucid, with a tinge of violet, iridescent when divested of the crystals of lime. Capillitium of slender threads, more or less branched and combined into a net; the threads dark colored, with pellucid extremities, and furnished with occasional rings or roundish swellings throughout their length. Spores globose, densely spinulose, dark violaceous, 10-14 mic. in diameter. Plate XII, Fig. 43.
Climbing up and surrounding the stems of small shrubs, herbaceous plants, culms of gra.s.ses, etc., especially those of living plants, rarely effused upon old wood, bark, leaves, etc. The aethalium from two or three to several centimeters in length, and with a radial thickness of two or three to several millimeters. The following forms or varieties have been distinguished as species at different times:
Var. 1. DIDYMIUM. Sporangia irregular, simple or lobed and branched, lifted up on narrow, flat extensions of the hypothallus, as if furnished with short white stipes; the common cortex wanting. This is _Didymium spumarioides_, Fr.; it is probably a dwarf form of the next variety.
Plate XII, Fig. 42.
Var. 2. CORNUTA. aethalium large and rugged in outline, cinerous from the scanty cortex; the sporangia loosely compacted, the branches running out into numerous free-pointed extremities. Capillitium of rather thick threads, forming a dense net, with broad expansions at the angles.
Spores 11-14 mic. in diameter. This is _Spumaria cornuta_, Schum. It is evidently the form so elaborately figured by Rostafinski, and which Fries says abounds in Northern Europe.
Var. 3. MUCILAGO. aethalium large, even and uniform in outline, covered by a thick, white, common cortex; the sporangia laterally confluent and densely compacted together throughout. Capillitium of rather slender threads, forming a loose net, scarcely expanded at the angles. Spores 10-13 mic. in diameter. This is _Spumaria mucilago_, Nees, as figured by Greville in the Scottish Cryptogamic Flora. The capillitium is figured by McBride in The Myxomycetes of Iowa. This is the only form I have met with in this country.
III. DIDERMA, Pers. Sporangia subglobose and stipitate or more often sessile, sometimes plasmodiocarp; the wall a thin membrane, with an outer layer composed of minute roundish granules of lime, which are usually compacted into a smooth continuous crust. Stipe present or mostly absent; the columella usually well developed. Capillitium of very slender threads, stretching from the columella to the wall of the sporangium, more or less branched, and combined into a loose net by short lateral branchlets. Spores globose, violaceous.
This genus is easily recognized by the smooth crustaceous layer of lime on the outer surface of the sporangium; in many cases this easily sh.e.l.ls off or breaks away. Such a coating occurs in a few species of Physarum, but here the vesicles of lime attached to the threads distinguish them.
This is Chondrioderma of Rostafinski's monograph; the reason for coining a new name and entirely discarding the old one is not apparent.
--1. LEANGIUM. Sporangium usually stipitate; the wall at maturity separating from the inner ma.s.s of spores and capillitium and splitting in a stellate manner, the segments becoming reflexed.
1. DIDERMA RADIATUM, Linn. Sporangium depressed-globose, the base flattened or umbilicate, stipitate or nearly sessile; the wall smooth, whitish or pale brown, splitting from the apex downward into a few reflexed irregular segments. Stipe short, thick, erect, tapering downward, standing on a thin membranaceous hypothallus; the columella large, convex, globose or obovoid, roughened. Capillitium of slender dark-colored threads, radiating from the columella, simple or branching outwardly. Spores globose, minutely warted, dark violaceous, 8-10 mic.
in diameter.
Growing on old bark and wood. Sporangium .8-1.2 mm. in diameter, the stipe shorter than the diameter, sometimes nearly obsolete. Apparently rare in this country.