Gymnogaster

Gymnogaster
From New South Wales, Australia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Agaricaceae
Genus: Gymnogaster
J.W.Cribb (1956)
Type species
Gymnogaster boletoides
J.W.Cribb (1956)

Gymnogaster is a genus of fungi in the family Agaricaceae.[1] It is a monotypic genus, containing the single secotioid species Gymnogaster boletoides, found in Australia. The fungus produces bright yellow fruit bodies with a light brown internal gleba, and the fruit bodies turn blue then dark brown after bruising or handling.

Contents

Taxonomy and classification

The genus was circumscribed by Joan Winifred Cribb in 1956, based on specimens she found growing in the woods of Mount Glorious, Queensland in February the previous year. The genus differs from the similar Secotium in that it lacks a peridium. Cribb initially placed the genus within the Secotiaceae family,[2] but this has since been made synonymous with the Agaricaceae.[3] In his second (1962) edition of his influential Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy, Rolf Singer placed Gymnogaster in the Gastroboletaceae, (a family that has since been folded into the Boletaceae),[4] in which he also included the genera Austrogaster, Truncocolumella, Gautieria, Chamonixia, Brauniellula, and Gastroboletus.[5]

Description

The fruit body is shaped roughly like a flattened sphere, about 2.5 cm (1.0 in) wide and 2.2 cm (0.9 in) high (excluding the stipe). The base of the fruit body is depressed and rounded, yellow; at the apex, the fixed part is russet red. The stipe is yellow on the outside but white within, projecting into the fruit body; it is 4–5 mm (0.16–0.20 in) long, 7 mm (0.28 in) thick, and solid. The columella (a central sterile portion) is white and 7 mm (0.28 in) wide. The gleba is cellular, pale brown, and composed of labyrinthoid cells that are up to 1 mm in diameter. The flesh is 50–70 μm thick, with a wide expanse of woven hyphae. The spores are elliptical or ovate, brown, smooth, and measure 9.5–13 by 5.6–7.0 μm. The basidia are four-spored.[2]

Fruit bodies of G. boletoides will turn bright blue immediately upon being handled or bruised, and slowly change color to dark brown. This is similar to the color reaction that occurs in several bolete mushrooms.[2]

Habitat and distribution

Gymnogaster boletoides is suspected to be an ectomycorrhizal species.[6] The fungus grows in wooded areas, and has been collected in Mount Glorious, Queensland,[2] including Lamington National Park.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kirk PM, Cannon PF, Minter DW, Stalpers JA. (2008). Dictionary of the Fungi (10th ed.). Wallingford, UK: CABI. p. 297. ISBN 9780851998268. 
  2. ^ a b c d Cribb JW. (1956). "The Gasteromycetes of Queensland. II. Secotiaceae". Papers of the Department of Botany, University of Queensland 3: 107–11. 
  3. ^ Kirk et al. (2008), p. 627.
  4. ^ Kirk et al. (2008), p. 274.
  5. ^ Singer R. (1962). The Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy (2nd ed.). Weinheim and New York: J. Cramer. 
  6. ^ Rinali AC, Comanini O, Kuyper TW. (2008). "Ectomycorrhizal fungal diversity: separating the wheat from the chaff" (PDF). Fungal Diversity 33: 1–45. http://www.fungaldiversity.org/fdp/sfdp/33-1.pdf. 
  7. ^ Young AM, Fechner NA, Ryvarden L. (2004). "A preliminary checklist and introductory notes on the macrofungi of Lamington National Park" (PDF). Australasian Mycologist 23 (2): 45–52. http://australasianmycology.com/pages/pdf/23/2/45.pdf. 

External links