name | Amanita aureosubucula |
name status | nomen provisorum |
author | Tulloss and K. W. Hughes |
english name | "Golden Underskirt Blusher" |
images |
1. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, Seneca, Oconee Co., South Carolina, U.S.A. (RET 079-5). 2. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, Seneca, Oconee Co., South Carolina, U.S.A. (RET 079-5). 3. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, Lake Monroe, Monroe Co., Indiana, U.S.A. (RET 530-10). 4. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, note yellow volval warts and striate margin, Jasper Co., Missouri, U.S.A. (RET 564-7). |
intro | For the moment, please see the technical tab of this page. |
odor/taste | The odor of this species is faint to lacking. The taste has not been recorded. |
discussion |
This species can have a largely or entirely white cap, but
is molecularly distinct from A. rubescens
var. alba. Moreover, the present species
sometimes has a distinctly yellow volva that can be
left in part on the underside of the stem's
skirt-like ring. This species was formerly called "Amanita sp-amerirubescens01" on the present site.—R. E. Tulloss |
brief editors | RET |
name | Amanita aureosubucula | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
author | Tulloss and K. W. Hughes | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
name status | nomen provisorum | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
english name | "Golden Underskirt Blusher" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
GenBank nos. |
Due to delays in data processing at GenBank, some accession numbers may lead to unreleased (pending) pages.
These pages will eventually be made live, so try again later.
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
intro |
Olive text indicates a specimen that has not been
thoroughly examined (for example, for microscopic details) and marks other places in the text
where data is missing or uncertain. The following is based on original research of R. E. Tulloss. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
pileus | 51 - 128 mm wide, whitish to cream to pale tan at first, bruising or staining pinkish to pale red-brown to pale brown to red-brown, sometimes appearing radially fibrillose, subovoid at first, then convex to planoconvex, sometimes depressed in disc, tacky, subshiny to shiny when dry; context white, bruising brick red to wine-brown, 4 - 9.5 mm thick over stipe, thinning evenly to margin; margin nonstriate or very short-striate to pronouncedly striate in age, nonappendiculate, decurved; universal veil yellow to cream at first, staining/bruising beige to red-brown, with tips often darkening first, detersile at first, at times becoming adnate, subpyramidal, verruculose, with irregularly polygonal base. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
lamellae | free to narrowly adnate with decurrent tooth and descending line on upper stipe, subcrowded to crowded, white to pale cream to faintly sordid cream in mass, white to whitish to very pale cream in side view, bruising as in pileus context, up to 5.5 - 10 mm broad, of constant breadth for most of length, sometimes forking, sometimes anastomosing; lamellulae subtruncate to rounded truncate to subattenuate to attenuate to attenuate in steps, ??. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
stipe | 35 - 65 × 8 - 16 mm, white at first, becoming almost entirely reddish brown to wine-brown to brownish, narrowing upward (rarely narrowest at mid-stipe), flaring at apex, finely pulverulent above, finely longitudinally striatulate; bulb up to 26 - 38 × 16 - 27 mm, broadly fusiform; context stuffed, white, staining brick-red to wine-red, with firm white stuffing material extending into upper third of bulb, with central cylinder ca. 4 mm wide, with larval tunnels concolorous with other bruised/stained parts of context; partial veil subapical to superior, membranous, skirt-like, eventually collapsing on stipe, striate above, floccose-fibrillose below, white to pale sulfur yellow to sulfur yellow above and white to sulfur yellow to more intensely yellow below, staining as in remainder of basidiome; universal veil often not evident at stipe base. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
odor/taste | Odor faint or lacking. Taste not recorded. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
macrochemical tests |
none recorded. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
lamella edge tissue | sterile. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
anatomical figures | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
basidiospores | RET: [95/3/3] (7.0-) 7.5 - 10.0 (-11.2) × (4.9-) 5.5 - 7.0 (-8.3) μm, (L = 8.4- 9.2 μm; L' = 8.7 μm; W = 5.9 - 6.3 μm; W' = 6.1 μm; Q = (1.19-) 1.27 - 1.65 (-1.69); Q = 1.32 - 1.52; Q' = 1.43), hyaline, colorless, thin-walled, smooth, amyloid, broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid, infrequently elongate, adaxially flattened; apiculus sublateral, cylindric, proportionately small; contents granular to mono- or multiguttulate with or without additional small granules; white in deposit. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
ecology | Missouri: In Quercus dominated forest. South Carolina: In duff under woodchips in landscaped (watered) area during drought under Q. alba, Rhododendron, and Ilex opaca or in dark loamy soil of reforested abandoned farm yard with Pinus echinata, Q. rubra, Q. alba, Q. bicolor(?), Q. marilandica, Carya sp., Prunus sp., Cornus florida, and Toxicodendron radicans. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
material examined | U.S.A.: CONNECTICUT—Unkn. Co. - Salmon River St. Pk., 4.ix.2011 Sandy Sheine s.n. [Tulloss 9-4-11-J] (RET 488-2, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). ILLINOIS—Clark Co. - Lincoln Trail St. Pk. [39.335° N/ 87.715° W, 163 m], 25.viii.2014 P. Harvey s.n. [mushroomobserver #175344] (RET 638-8, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). INDIANA—Monroe Co. - SE of Bloomington, Lake Monroe, Paynetown St. Recreation Area [39.0941° N/ 86.4476° W, 174 m], 1.ix.2012 Stephen Russell 3842 [mushroomobserver #108032] (RET 530-10, nrITS seq'd.). Montgomery Co. - Waveland, Shades St. Pk. [39.9378° N/ 87.0894° W, 223 m], 28.viii.2012 S. Russell 3617 [mushroomobserver #107635] (RET 530-4, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). MISSISSIPPI—Clay Co. - Montpelier, Jann and Mike's farm [33.7134º N/ 88.9469º W, 86 m], 2.vii.2017 David Tate 5710-16 [mushroomobserver #292966] (RET 811-6, nrITS-LSU seq'd.). MISSOURI—Jasper Co. - NW of Kendricktown [37.2062° N/ 94.3354°W, 311m], 14.vi.2013 Jon Shaffer s.n. [mushroomobserver #136364] (RET 547-9, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.), 6.viii.2013 David Tate 5710-16 J. Shaffer s.n. [mushroomobserver #141950] (RET 564-7, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). Jefferson Co. - Cliff Cave Park, Cliff Cave, 8.ix.2009 Patrick Harvey s.n. [mushroomobserver #25023] (RET 443-6, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). Newton Co. - Neosho, Fort Crowder Conservation Area [36.8167° N/ 94.3061° W, 370m], 14.viii.2013 J. Shaffer s.n. [mushroomobserver #142775] (RET 564-4, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). NEW JERSEY—Mercer Co. - Hopewell, off Carter Rd., woods behind AT&T/Lucent research labs [40°21’39” N/ 74°43’29” W, 63 m], 19.vii.1984 R. E. Tulloss & C. D. Hechtman [Tulloss 7-19-84-C] (RET 050-3). Warren Co. - Yards Creek Scout Reservation, NW of Blairstown, 5.vii.1981 Mary A. King & Mark. H. & R. E. Tulloss 7-5-81-B (RET 115-5). NORTH CAROLINA—McDowell Co. - Little Switzerland, Blue Ridge Mtns., Wildacres Retreat, 15.ix.2014 W.S. s.n. [mushroomobserver #179154] (RET 647-9, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.). SOUTH CAROLINA—Oconee Co. - Seneca, 28.vi.1985 R. E. Tulloss 6-28-85-C (RET 055-4, nrITS & nrLSU seq'd.), 18.vii.1986 M.A. King, D.C. & R.E. Tulloss 7-19-86-B (RET 079-5, nrITS seq'd.). VIRGINIA—Fairfax Co. - McLean, 3.viii.1992 Buck McAdoo 207#15 (RET 076-6). | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
discussion |
Despite the sometimes white or very pallid pileus,
this species often can be segregated in the field
from the material determined on this site as
A.
rubescens var. alba. The
present species often has a yellow partial
veil. The yellow universal veil material
(illustrated on this page as it appears on the
underside of the partial veil) and the pale sulfur
yellow to sulfur yellow upper surface of the partial
veil is not seen in A. rubescens var.
alba. In the following figure, sporographs for the present species and A. rubescens var. alba are compared: The presently known range of this taxon extends from Connecticut to South Carolina in the eastern U.S. and, thence, westward to Indiana and Missouri. At the moment, this taxon is segregated solely by its nrITS and nrLSU sequences. In eastern North America, compare A. flavorubens, A. rubescens var. alba, Amanita submaculata, A. sp-amerirubescens04, A. sp-amerirubescens 02, and A. sp-N47. The taxa with temporary code names of the form "sp-amerirubescnes0X" (where "X" is an integer) were originally treated on this site as a single taxon "Amanita amerirubescens." The latter taxon page is maintained on the site and references collections still not divided among the temporary code names. The present species formerly bore the temporary code "A. sp-amerirubescens01." | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
citations | —R. E. Tulloss | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
editors | RET | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Information to support the viewer in reading the content of "technical" tabs can be found here.
name | Amanita aureosubucula |
name status | nomen provisorum |
author | Tulloss and K. W. Hughes |
english name | "Golden Underskirt Blusher" |
images |
1. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, Seneca, Oconee Co., South Carolina, U.S.A. (RET 079-5). 2. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, Seneca, Oconee Co., South Carolina, U.S.A. (RET 079-5). 3. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, Lake Monroe, Monroe Co., Indiana, U.S.A. (RET 530-10). 4. Amanita sp-amerirubescens01, note yellow volval warts and striate margin, Jasper Co., Missouri, U.S.A. (RET 564-7). |
anatomical figures | |
photo |
RET - (1-2) Seneca, Oconee County, South Carolina, U.S.A. (RET 079-5) Stephen Russell - (3) Lake Monroe, Monroe County, Indiana, U.S.A. (RET 530-10) [Note: The original of this image and others of the same collection can be found here. Jon Shaffer - (4) Jasper County, Missouri, U.S.A. (RET 564-7) [Note: The original of this image and others of the same collection can be found here. |
Each spore data set is intended to comprise a set of measurements from a single specimen made by a single observer; and explanations prepared for this site talk about specimen-observer pairs associated with each data set. Combining more data into a single data set is non-optimal because it obscures observer differences (which may be valuable for instructional purposes, for example) and may obscure instances in which a single collection inadvertently contains a mixture of taxa.