Leucocoprinus ianthinus explained

Leucocoprinus ianthinus is a species of mushroom producing fungus in the family Agaricaceae.[1] [2] Like several other Leucocoprinus species it may have originated in a tropical climate but now finds a home in plant pots, greenhouses and compost piles in many countries. It is not seen in plant pots with the same kind of regularity as the well known Leucocoprinus birnbaumii and not seen in the wild as frequently as Leucocoprinus brebissonii.

Taxonomy

It was first described in 1888 by the English botanist and mycologist Mordecai Cubitt Cooke who classified it as Agaricus (Lepiota) ianthinus based on specimens collected in the hothouses of Kew Gardens (London, England) in 1888.[3] In 1891 the Italian mycologist Pier Andrea Saccardo reclassified it as Lepiota ianthinus or Lepiota janthina in the original text.[4] It was reclassified as Leucocoprinus ianthinus in 1945 by Marcel Locquin.[5]

An additional basionym was classified as Lepiota lilacinogranulosa or Lepiota lilacino-granulosa by the German mycologist Paul Christoph Hennings in 1898.[6] In 1934 the French botanists and mycologists Roger Heim and Henri Romagnesi reclassified it as a variant of Hiatula cepaestipes (now known as Leucocoprinus cepistipes).[7] The species was reclassified as Leucocoprinus lilacinogranulosa by Locquin in 1943.[8] This is now also considered a synonym of Leucocoprinus ianthinus however some mycologists do consider them as separate, but similar looking species.[9]

Description

Leucocoprinus ianthinus is a small dapperling mushroom with thin white flesh.

Cap: 1.5-7cm, starting ovate/hemispherical before expanding to campanulate (bell shaped) with age with a prominent umbo and then plano-convex with age. The surface is whitish with a dark purple to reddish brown centre and purplish scales spreading across the cap but becoming sparse at towards the edges. The margins have striations that extend two thirds of the way across the cap or up to the umbo. They may split radially and discolour yellowish with age and it is common for them to curve inwards with age. Gills: Free, moderately crowded and white. Stem: 3.5-7cm long and 2-5mm wide tapering upwards from a slightly bulbous base and hollow interior. The surface is yellowish white towards the top of the stem, whitish below the ring and then with a violet to lilac fibrillose coating at the base and a white tomentous covering at the bulb. The white, ascending, stem ring has a purplish margin but may disappear. Spore print: White to pale lilac. Spores: A different range of sizes is given by different sources: 8–12 x 5.5–7.5 μm[10] or 6.5–10 x 5.75–6.5 μm[11] or 9.5-10.5 x 6.5-7 μm. Ellipsoid to amygdaliform with a thick wall and a germ pore that is covered with a hyaline cap. Dextrinoid, congophilous and cyanophilous. In cresyl blue a pink colouration is visible in the inner wall of the spore. Basidia: 17–42 x 8–11 μm. Four spored or rarely two spored. Smell: fungal, strong and astringent. Taste: fungal.[12]

Similar species

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Species fungorum – Leucocoprinus ianthinus (Sacc.) P. Mohr, Boletus 18(2): 48 (1994) . 19 July 2022 . www.speciesfungorum.org.
  2. Web site: Mycobank Database – Leucocoprinus ianthinus .
  3. Cooke . M. C. . Massee . George . 1887–1888 . New British Fungi . Grevillea . London . Williams and Norgate . 16 . 101.
  4. Book: Saccardo . P. A. . Sylloge fungorum omnium hucusque cognitorum . Traverso . G. B. . Trotter . A. . 1891 . sumptibus auctoris . 9 . Patavii . 10.
  5. Locquin . Marcel . 1945 . Notes sur les Lépiotes II (suite) . Publications de la Société Linnéenne de Lyon . 14 . 5 . 94 . 10.3406/linly.1945.13215.
  6. Hennings . P. . 1898 . Die in den Gewächshäusern des Berl. bot. Gartns beobachteten Pilze. . Verhandlungen des Botanischen Vereins für die Provinz Brandenburg . Berlin . Kommissions-Verlag von R. Gaertner . 40 . 145.
  7. Heim . Roger . Romagnesi . Henri . 1934 . Sur Quelques Agarics de la Flore Française . Bulletin trimestriel de la Société mycologique de France . 50 . 184 . gallica.bnf.fr.
  8. Locquin . Marcel . 1943 . Étudie du développement des spores du genre Leucocoprinus Pat, (Troisième Partie) suivie de la description d'une espèce nouvelle et d'une espèce critique . Publications de la Société Linnéenne de Lyon . 12 . 6 . 95 . 10.3406/linly.1943.9747.
  9. Gierczyk . Błażej . Dubiel . Grzegorz . 30 June 2014 . Leucocoprinus lilacinogranulosus (Henn.) Locq. in Poland . Acta Mycologica . en . 49 . 1 . 59–67 . 10.5586/am.2014.005 . 2353-074X . free.
  10. Book: Noordeloos . Machiel . Flora Agaricina Neerlandica Critical monographs on families of agarics and boleti occurring in the Netherlands vol. 5. . Wkuyper . T H . Vellinga . Else . A.A. Balkema Publishers . 1988 . 80–81.
  11. Reid . Derek A. . 1989 . Notes on some Leucocoprinoid fungi from Britain . Mycological Research . 93 . 4 . 418 . 10.1016/s0953-7562(89)80034-6 . 0953-7562.
  12. Book: Buczacki, Stefan . Collins fungi guide . 2012 . Collins . 978-0-00-724290-0 . London . 793683235.
  13. Web site: Species Fungorum – Leucocoprinus lilacinogranulosus (Henn.) Locq., Bull. mens. Soc. linn. Soc. Bot. Lyon 12(6): 95 (1943) . 21 July 2022 . www.speciesfungorum.org.
  14. Gierczyk . Błażej . Dubiel . Grzegorz . 30 June 2014 . Leucocoprinus lilacinogranulosus (Henn.) Locq. in Poland . Acta Mycologica . en . 49 . 1 . 59–67 . 10.5586/am.2014.005 . 2353-074X. free .