name | Amanita conara |
name status | nomen acceptum |
author | Tulloss, Halling & G. M. Muell. |
english name | "Fat Barefoot Lepidella" |
images | |
cap |
The cap of Amanita conara is 60 - 150 mm wide, convex at first, plano-convex and somewhat undulate with maturity, not viscid when wet, dull at first, later shiny when dry, with a nonstriate, appendiculate, decurved margin. The appendiculate material is floccose and pale pink at first, largely disappearing at maturity. The cap is light ochraceous buff with light orange stains or pale buff or grayish tan, occasionally with light orange or brown stains. Volval remnants are present as crumb-like warts or pyramidal warts or flattened felt-like patches or small irregular patches, scattered or densely concentrated over the center, pale orangish white to pinkish, becoming sordid or brown, with thin membranous upper surface on patches. The flesh is white to cream, brownish cream, and unchanging, 7 - 15 mm thick over the stem, rather thick even near margin. |
gills |
The gills are free, close to crowded, pale cream to slightly orangish yellow tan in mass, occasionally forking, leaving decurrent lines on the upper stem. The short gills are subattenuate to rounded attenuate to truncate, plentiful, of diverse lengths, and unevenly distributed. |
stem |
The stem is 71 - 115+ × 11 - 30± mm, white, sometimes with ochraceous to light orange stains, sometimes faintly brick colored after handling, narrowing upward, flaring at the top, pulverulent above the ring, sometimes satiny below, sometimes with upper pointed fibrillose scales the tips of which become faintly brick-colored or concolorous with the ring. The ring is apical, submembranous, easily shreaded, pale orangish white, with underside bearing warts and flocculents, on the upper side striate. The volva is present as a thin limb on or appressed to the upper part of the bulb, often also present as a limbus internus encircling a portion of the base of the stem and in other small fragments on the lower stem; the limbus internus may be white to orangish white. The bulb is 42 - 60 × 32 - 60 mm, very robust, napiform to subnapiform, with white, "threads" at the very base. The flesh is white to cream, brownish cream, and unchanging. |
odor/taste |
The odor is "earthy" in immature material, in mature material rich, strong, like "old ham" or like "unwashed athletic socks." |
spores |
The spores measure (7.8-) 8.1 - 10.0 (-11.5) × (5.3-) 6.0 - 7.5 (-8.7) µm and are broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid and amyloid. Clamps are present at base of basidia. |
discussion |
Originally described from Costa Rica, may occur as far north as the state of Guerrero in Mexico. This species is subgregarious to scattered in association with oak. Amanita conara belongs to Bas' subsection Gymnopodae, see A. gymnopus Corner & Bas. This subsection is largely known from Australia, Malaya, and Japan and potentially a representative of a group of taxa that migrated to the Americas in association with plant symbionts that are now extinct.—R. E. Tulloss |
brief editors | RET |
name | Amanita conara | ||||||||
author | Tulloss, Halling & G. M. Muell. 2011. Mycotaxon 117: 180, figs. 5-8. | ||||||||
name status | nomen acceptum | ||||||||
english name | "Fat Barefoot Lepidella" | ||||||||
etymology | κοναροζ (Grk.) "fat" or "well-fed" | ||||||||
MycoBank nos. | 518296 | ||||||||
GenBank nos. |
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holotypes | USJ; isotype, NY | ||||||||
intro | The following is based on original research by R. E. Tulloss, R. E. Halling, and G. M. Mueller. | ||||||||
pileus | protolog: 60 - 150 mm wide, light ochraceous buff (ca. 5A2) with light orange stains (ca. 6A4) or pale buff to faintly tannish or orangish cream (paler and more tan than 7.5YR 8/4, paler than 10YR 8/4) or grayish orange (6B4), occasionally stained faintly brown here or there, convex at first, planoconvex and somewhat undulate at maturity, not viscid when wet, dull at first, later shiny when dry; context white to cream to slightly brownish cream, context unchanging or slowly staining brown to reddish brown when cut or bruised, 7 - 15 mm thick at stipe, thinning evenly and slowly to margin, rather thick even near margin; margin nonstriate, decurved, appendiculate (at first with appendiculate material floccose and pale pinkish, at maturity only with scattered crumb-like bits); universal veil as crumb-like warts or pyramidal warts over disc, sometimes as eccentric patches, at first pale orangish white to pinkish (5A2, paler toward pileus margin) becoming sordid or brown or taking on brownish tint, smooth surfaced, often easily taking fingerprint, pulverulent to subfelted, detersile, with patches having membranous upper layer. | ||||||||
lamellae | protolog: free, with decurrent lines on stipe apex connecting to striae on upper surface of partial veil, close to subcrowded to crowded, pale cream (immature) to slightly orangish yellowish tan in mass, more vividly colored in side view (light cream in immature material, then more yellow than 2.5Y 7/6 or more brown than 2.5Y 8/6 or more orange than 4B6 or more brown than 4A6 or pale yellow (4A4) or pale orange (5A3)), unchanging when cut or bruised, 6.5 - 12 mm broad, occasionally forked, with edge minutely pulverulent and white to approximately concolorous with partial veil; lamellulae subattenuate to rounded attenuate to truncate, unevenly distributed, of diverse lengths, plentiful. | ||||||||
stipe | protolog: 71 - 115+ × 11 - 30± mm, white, sometimes with ochraceous to light orange stains, sometimes faintly brick colored or pale pink after handling or in wounds, narrowing upward, flaring at apex, pulverulent above partial veil, sometimes satiny below partial veil, longitudinally striatulate, with upward pointing fibrillose scales or squamules (concolorous to light orange (ca. 6A4), with tips sometimes faintly brick colored or concolorous with partial veil and limbus internus of universal veil), with shaggy region beginning below annulus and ending roughly 10 mm above bulb; bulb 42 - 60 × 37 - 60 mm, robustly clavate-subnapiform to robustly napiform, with white mycelial threads prominent at very base; context solid or stuffed? (possibly appearing so due to larva damage), concolorous with pileus context, with bruising/staining reaction as in pileus context, with larva tunnels yellowish in center of stipe and reddish brown elsewhere; partial veil apical, submembranous, shredding, sometimes deciduous at least in part, pale orangish white (5A2), with underside bearing warts and flocculence, with upper side striate, sometimes thickened at edge; universal veil often present as short thin limb on or appressed to upper part of bulb, often with nearly complete limbus internus partially encircling (about half-circumference) base of stipe and in other small fragments on lower stipe above bulb, 1 - 2 mm thick, nearly white to pale orangish white (5A2). | ||||||||
odor/taste | protolog: Odor "earthy" in immature specimen; rich, strong, like "old ham" (but sometimes not unpleasantly) or like "unwashed athletic socks" in a mature specimen. Taste not recorded. | ||||||||
macrochemical tests |
protolog: Spot test for laccase (syringaldazine) - negative throughout basidiome. Spot test for tyrosinase (paracresol) - positive in stipe (excluding bulb) and pileipellis and often in large areas of lamellae and pileus context (outside of disc) or strongly positive throughout basidiome except for parts of lamellae. Test vouchers: Halling 7272, Mueller 4643, and Tulloss 6-13-95-C. | ||||||||
pileipellis | protolog: narrow and with pronounced boundaries, bounded above by densely placed anticlinally oriented hyphae binding upper surface to remains of universal veil, bounded below by loosely interwoven and disordered tissue of pileus context, with separation from universal veil at first via mechanical rupture of hyphae; 30 - 55 µm thick at approximately midradius in mature or near mature material, lacking substantial suprapellis, with gelatinization absent even at point of breaking of partial veil and in mature material limited to surface, with elements densely packed vertically, yellow-orange; filamentous, undifferentiated hyphae 2.5 - 7.5 µm wide, branching, disordered and interwoven over disc, dominantly subradially arranged with some criss-crossing hyphae away from disc, often yellow or yellowish, hyphal tips of broader hyphae common; vascular hyphae 3.4 - 11.4 µm wide, sinuous, sometimes in tangles, yellow, scattered. | ||||||||
pileus context | protolog: filamentous, undifferentiated hyphae 2.5 - 8.9 µm wide, occasionally branching, sometimes fasciculate, common in disc, plentiful at mid-radius; acrophysalides broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid (up to 80 × 60 µm in disc) or clavate (up to 131 × 48 µm), similarly shaped and smaller at mid-radius, commonly with inflated subterminal cell, in disc dominating and disordered, at mid-radius plentiful and with tendency to subradial orientation; vascular hyphae 2.8 - 17.8 µm wide, sinuate to hypersinuate, rarely branching, common in region immediately below pileipellis, rather common elsewhere, scattered in all mounts. | ||||||||
lamella trama | protolog: bilateral, divergent; ws = 50 - 65 µm (good rehydration); central stratum comprising interwoven filamentous undifferentiated hyphae 2.5 - 11.4 µm wide, lacking inflated intercalary segments; subhymenial base dominated by densely packed divergent filamentous undifferentiated hyphae 3.8 - 11.4 µm wide, with angle of divergence shallow; terminal, inflated cells not observed; vascular hyphae not observed. | ||||||||
subhymenium | protolog: wst-near = 70–85 μm (moderate to good rehydration); wst-far = (80-) 90–105 μm (moderate to good rehydration); scant, often with only one (or no) cell(s) between bases of longest basidia/-oles and subhymenial base, with basidia arising from elongate cells of subhymenial base and subglobose to branched to ellipsoid to clavate cells and uninflated hyphal segments, with such elements arranged approximately perpendicular to central stratum. | ||||||||
basidia | protolog: 30 - 58 × 9.1 - 13 µm, 4-sterigmate, with sterigmata up to 6.0 × 1.5 µm and sometimes subcylindric; clamps and proliferated clamps relatively common. | ||||||||
universal veil | protolog: On pileus, exterior surface: particularly well-formed and in place on surface of patches, very thin, comprising lattice of irregularly ordered fascicles of partially gelatinized orange-brown hyphae, with fascicles up to 18 (or more) hyphal diameters wide; filamentous undifferentiated hyphae 1.8–3.9 μm wide, branching; with immediately underlying thin membranous layer, comprising loosely interwoven filamentous undifferentiated hyphae 2.2–8.9 μm wide, disordered, commonly branching, anastomosing, plentiful to dominating, sometimes in narrow fascicles, thin-walled, colorless and hyaline to (infrequently) yellowish and subrefractive; inflated cells uncommon, terminal, singly or in pairs, broadly clavate to clavate to cylindric, thin-walled, hyaline, up to 57 × 13.0 μm; vascular hyphae not observed. On pileus, interior: all elements strongly vertically aligned, orangish brown on wart surface; filamentous undifferentiated hyphae 1.0–12.1 μm wide, frequently branching, occasionally anastomosing, inside wart colorless and hyaline or (occasionally) yellowish and with subrefractive walls; inflated cells in terminal chains of up to at least five, thin-walled, plentiful, colorless and hyaline inside wart, barrel-shaped to ovoid to broadly clavate to clavate to narrowly fusiform and up to 48 × 25 μm in lower third of wart above basal part and subglobose to ellipsoid to clavate (up to at least 78 × 38 μm) to narrowly clavate or narrowly fusiform (up to 91 × 19.0 μm) to irregularly shaped and sometimees connected with three or more hyphae via separate septa in upper third of wart; vascular hyphae not observed except in upper part of wart and there very infrequent and (e.g.) 2.2–4.9 μm wide. On pileus, basal part: densely packed, anticlinally aligned hyphae connecting intimately with pileipellis. On underside of partial veil (i.e., limbus internus): filamentous undifferentiated hyphae 2.2–10.8 μm wide, occasionally branching, common; inflated cells dominating, terminal singly or as concatenated pairs, globose to subglobose to pyriform to broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid to elongate to broadly clavate to clavate to narrowly clavate (up to 60 × 33 μm), dominantly thinwalled, occasionally with wall up to 0.8 μm thick; vascular hyphae not observed. On stipe base: with structure very like that of surface layers of universal veil on pileus; filamentous undifferentiated hyphae dominating, thinwalled, slightly gelatinized at surface, hyaline and colorless or (occasionally) with walls yellowish and subrefractive, 2.5–10.0 μm wide, commonly branching, fasciculate, densely packed, with predominantly vertical orientation (i.e., not disordered as on pileus); inflated cells rather infrequent, scattered, terminal, narrowly clavate to clavate (e.g., 30+ × 12.5 μm); vascular hyphae not observed; clamps not observed. | ||||||||
stipe context | protolog: longitudinally acrophysalidic; filamentous, undifferentiated hyphae 3.2 - 17.8 µm wide, branching occasionally, plentiful in interior, dominant near surface, sometimes constricted at septa; acrophysalides up to at least 395 × 32 µm, plentiful in interior, common near surface; vascular hyphae 7.6 - 11.4 µm wide, sinuous, infrequent, occasionally clustered; clamps not observed. | ||||||||
partial veil | protolog: very thin and sparse layer of criss-crossing, hyphae, in mounts dominated by inflated cells of limbus internus attached to underside of hyphal framework; filamentous, undifferentiated hyphae 1.5 - 3.8 µm wide, occasionally branching, in narrow fascicles, rapidly gelatinizing prior to maturity of basidiophore; inflated cells not observed; vascular hyphae not observed. | ||||||||
lamella edge tissue | protolog: sterile. | ||||||||
anatomical figures | |||||||||
basidiospores | protolog: [181/8/4] (7.8-) 8.1 - 10.0 (-11.5) × (5.3-) 6.0 - 7.5 (-8.7) µm, (L = (8.6-) 8.8 - 9.4 µm; L’ = 9.1 µm; W = 6.5 - 6.8 (-7.0) µm; W’ = 6.6 µm; Q = (1.17-) 1.23 - 1.51 (-1.70); Q = 1.33 - 1.41 (-1.44); Q’ = 1.37), hyaline, colorless, thin-walled, smooth, amyloid, broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid, sometimes swollen at one end, often at least somewhat adaxially flattened; apiculus sublateral, cylindric; contents guttulate to multi- to monoguttulate; color in deposit unknown. | ||||||||
ecology | protolog: Subgregarious to scattered. At 1600 - 1720 m elev. In thick, dark, wet loam under shallow layer of leaf litter of mixed broadleaf forest including Quercus oocarpa or in such a habitat with that tree and Q. seemannii. | ||||||||
material examined |
protolog: COSTA RICA: CARTAGO—Ctn. Unkn. - Estrella | ||||||||
discussion |
protolog: Four taxa have been assigned to Amanita subsect. Gymnopodae world wide, but all can be easily distinguished from the present species. In addition to their general habit, three of these species have in common with A. conara a number of distinctive characters among which are rubescent or darkening context, a distinctive odor, yellow or orange tints on the lamellae, and a submembranous surface layer of the universal veil.Guzmán (1975) reported A. ochrophylla from Quercus forest in Guerrero, Mexico. His macroscopic description fits A. conara rather well; and his measurements for spores are 9 - 11 × (5.5-) 6.0 - 7.5 µm. This is a relatively good match for our spore data from A. conara. A Q’ of approximately 1.5 was estimated for spores of Guzmán’s material. The material Guzmán cited has not yet been reviewed, but it appears that A. conara may occur in Mexico. Mueller 4643 consists of a single, rather large, immature specimen of A. conara. It comes from the same habit as the other material cited and is easily recognizable because of excellent photographs and notes on fresh material that accompany the exsiccatum; moreover, the thin membranous outer layer of the universal veil can be seen on scalp sections of the universal veil remnants on the pileus. We have three collections of what appears to be a similar, but possibly distinguishable, taxon from Ctn. Coto Brus, Prov. Puntarenas (La Amistad sites nos. 1 and 2) in association with Q. corrugata, Q. seemannii, and other oaks and belonging in subsection Gymnopodae (see Amanita sp-CR18). These collections differ from A. conara in colors of the basidiome (not all collections are annotated) and consistently have smaller subglobose to broadly ellipsoid spores: [160/8/3] (6.1-) 7.0 - 9.5 (-11.6) × (5.1-) 5.9 - 7.9 (-9.5) µm, (L = 7.6 - 8.2 (-8.3) µm; L’ = 7.9 µm; W = (6.3-) 6.7 - 7.0 µm; W’ = 6.7 µm; Q = (1.04-) 1.08 - 1.29 (-1.41); Q = (1.11-) 1.15 - 1.23; Q’ = 1.17). All three collections are deposited in NY (Halling 7803, 8148. 8360). The present species was called "sp. CR10" in drafts and keys circulated by RET. | ||||||||
citations | —R. E. Tulloss | ||||||||
editors | RET | ||||||||
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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.