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23-11-2025 11:16

Bohan Jia

Hi,  I found small discs growing on dead stem of

21-11-2025 10:56

Christopher Engelhardt Christopher Engelhardt

Very small (~0,5 mm) white ascos, found yesterday

18-11-2025 18:26

David Malloch David Malloch

I am trying to locate the article, Müller, E. 195

21-11-2025 15:22

Vasileios Kaounas Vasileios Kaounas

Found in moss, forest with Pinus halepensis. Dime

21-11-2025 10:47

François Freléchoux François Freléchoux

Bonjour,Peut-être Mollisia palustris ?Trouvée su

21-11-2025 10:50

Mirek Gryc

Hello Please help me identify this little asco.It

21-11-2025 11:52

Jean-Luc Ranger

Bonjour à tous, on voit toujours 2 espèces areni

29-06-2016 18:06

Elisabeth Stöckli

Bonjour,Trouvé sur branches mortes cortiquées de

14-11-2025 16:26

Marian Jagers Marian Jagers

Hello everyone, On dead wood of Cytisus scoparius

17-11-2025 21:46

Philippe PELLICIER

Bonjour,Récolté sur bois pourrissant de feuillu

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Mollisia on Typha
Enrique Rubio, 04-06-2014 14:35
Enrique Rubio

Hi to all


These small (0.3-0.6 mm) gregarious, sessile, not really cupulate apothecia were found on Typha old leaves at 1350 m of altitude. The excipulum is brownish black and they have not conspicuous marginal elements. Any crystal we have seen in medulla or excipulum. The ascomata are KOH yellowish. Ascospores strongly clavate with well visible gel sheath around fresh discharged ascospores.


It seems to be close to Mollisia hydrophila that I found regulary on Phragmites at the sea level, but this species are paler ascomata with many crystals.


Have you any idea for help me?


 


Thanks again

Hans-Otto Baral, 04-06-2014 17:03
Hans-Otto Baral
Re : Mollisia on Typha
It reminds me a bit of Scutomollisia lanceata (clavate spores, KOH-yellow reaction) but that species has 1-septate spores in the living asci.

M. juncina is paler and has smaller spores, also I noted KOH-.

Zotto


Enrique Rubio, 04-06-2014 17:46
Enrique Rubio
Re : Mollisia on Typha

Hi Zotto


You are right because the ascomata are very close to Scutomollisia lanceata. The ascospores are also sub-cuneate but lack the septa. Maybe it could be an Scutomollisia.


Thanks