First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma

Chorioactis geaster (Peck) Kupfer, the devil’s cigar fungus, is reported from Oklahoma for the first time. A collection was made in Choctaw County in southeast Oklahoma in January 2017. Chorioactis geaster is a fleshy fungus that belongs to the Ascomycota and is an example of what are commonly refer...

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Main Authors: Clark L. Ovrebo, Sheila Brandon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oklahoma Native Plant Society 2017-12-01
Series:Oklahoma Native Plant Record
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/ONPR/article/view/7401/6797
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spelling doaj-f10e1298b6204f9893f3f71e926305a32020-11-24T23:13:09ZengOklahoma Native Plant SocietyOklahoma Native Plant Record1536-77381536-77382017-12-01171697110.22488/okstate.18.100007First Record of Chorioactis geaster from OklahomaClark L. Ovrebo0Sheila BrandonUniversity of Central OklahomaChorioactis geaster (Peck) Kupfer, the devil’s cigar fungus, is reported from Oklahoma for the first time. A collection was made in Choctaw County in southeast Oklahoma in January 2017. Chorioactis geaster is a fleshy fungus that belongs to the Ascomycota and is an example of what are commonly referred to as cup fungi. The young ascomata are closed, swollen-elongate, brown and finely hairy. During expansion, the ascomata split into 3–6 rays that are reminiscent of earth star fungi. The hymenophore color is pale yellow to tan. The ascospores are large, measuring 60–70 x 12–13 μm, and are curved-fusoid in shape. All previous records from the United States have been reported from Texas, and the fungus is also known from Japan. The holotype was collected in Austin, Texas in 1891 and described by Charles H. Peck in the genus Urnula. http://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/ONPR/article/view/7401/6797AscomycotaPezizalescup fungibiogeography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clark L. Ovrebo
Sheila Brandon
spellingShingle Clark L. Ovrebo
Sheila Brandon
First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma
Oklahoma Native Plant Record
Ascomycota
Pezizales
cup fungi
biogeography
author_facet Clark L. Ovrebo
Sheila Brandon
author_sort Clark L. Ovrebo
title First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma
title_short First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma
title_full First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma
title_fullStr First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma
title_full_unstemmed First Record of Chorioactis geaster from Oklahoma
title_sort first record of chorioactis geaster from oklahoma
publisher Oklahoma Native Plant Society
series Oklahoma Native Plant Record
issn 1536-7738
1536-7738
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Chorioactis geaster (Peck) Kupfer, the devil’s cigar fungus, is reported from Oklahoma for the first time. A collection was made in Choctaw County in southeast Oklahoma in January 2017. Chorioactis geaster is a fleshy fungus that belongs to the Ascomycota and is an example of what are commonly referred to as cup fungi. The young ascomata are closed, swollen-elongate, brown and finely hairy. During expansion, the ascomata split into 3–6 rays that are reminiscent of earth star fungi. The hymenophore color is pale yellow to tan. The ascospores are large, measuring 60–70 x 12–13 μm, and are curved-fusoid in shape. All previous records from the United States have been reported from Texas, and the fungus is also known from Japan. The holotype was collected in Austin, Texas in 1891 and described by Charles H. Peck in the genus Urnula.
topic Ascomycota
Pezizales
cup fungi
biogeography
url http://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/ONPR/article/view/7401/6797
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AT sheilabrandon firstrecordofchorioactisgeasterfromoklahoma
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