Biology:Protostropharia alcis

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Short description: Species of fungus

Protostropharia alcis
Protostropharia alcis 318591.jpg
On moose dung, Newfoundland, Canada
Scientific classification
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P. alcis
Binomial name
Protostropharia alcis
(Kytöv.) Redhead, Thorn & Malloch (2013)
Synonyms[1]
  • Stropharia alcis Kytöv. (1999)

Protostropharia alcis is a species of coprophilous agaric fungus in the family Strophariaceae. The fungus produces fruit bodies on moose, elk, and deer dung.[2] The species has been recorded in Europe, Canada and Brazil.[3]

Habitat

In Wigierski National Park in Poland, it occurs in wetland forests with conifers such as Norway spruce and Scots pine, together with common alder, silver birch and moor birch, and in dominated woodlands on swamp peat and wet acid-mineral soils. P. alcis tends to grow where moose are present. It appears from September to October. [4]

The type specimen was found in a spruce-hardwood forest in the eastern part of Northern Ostrobothnia region in Central Finland.

Taxonomic history

It was originally described by Finnish mycologist Ilkka Kytövuori in 1999, as one of six species in the "Stropharia semiglobata" group in northwestern Europe.

In 2013, the fungus was transferred by Redhead et al. to Protostropharia,[1] a genus circumscribed to contain Stropharia species characterized by the formation of astrocystidia rather than acanthocytes on their mycelium.[5]

The variety austrobrasiliensis was described from Rio Grande do Sul in 2008, where it grows on cow dung, or dung-enriched soil.[6]

References

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q7252138 entry