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Associations

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Fungus / parasite
Verticillium anamorph of Hypomyces chrysospermus parasitises fruitbody of Paxillus involutus
Other: major host/prey

Fungus / parasite
Verticillium anamorph of Hypomyces chrysospermus parasitises malformed, thick stemmed, small capped, rapidly soft and deliquescing fruitbody of Boletus

Fungus / parasite
Verticillium anamorph of Hypomyces chrysospermus parasitises malformed, thick stemmed, small capped, rapidly soft and deliquescing fruitbody of Boletus edulis
Other: major host/prey

Fungus / parasite
Verticillium anamorph of Hypomyces chrysospermus parasitises fruitbody of Scleroderma citrinum
Other: major host/prey

Fungus / parasite
chlamydospore of Sepedonium anamorph of Hypomyces chrysospermus parasitises fruitbody of Pseudoboletus parasiticus

Fungus / parasite
chlamydospore of Sepedonium anamorph of Hypomyces chrysospermus parasitises fruitbody of Boletus chrysenteron ss.
Other: major host/prey

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Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Hypomyces chrysospermus (Bull.) Tul. Ann. Sci
Nat. IV. 13 : 16. 1860.
Reticularia chrysosperma Bull. Herb. Vt. pi. 476, f. 4. 1789. Mucor chrysospermus Bull. Hist. Champ. Fr. 1 : 99. 1791. Uredo mycophila Pers. Obs. Myc. 1 : 16. 1796. Sepedonium. chrysosperm.um Fries, Syst. Myc. 3 : 438. 1832. Hypomyces boletmus Peck, Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 75 : 15. 1904.
Stromata consisting of a golden or lemon-yellow powdery mass which covers the substratum often for several cm.; conidia globose, golden-^ellow, beautifully but delicately echinulate, 15-18 // in diameter; perithecia gregarious or thickly crowded, nestling in the yellow subiculum, reddish or reddish-brown ; asci cylindric ; spores 1-seriate with the ends overlapping in the ascus, fusiform, mostly curved, and becoming, when mature, slightly rough, 1-septate, with the septum near the basal end, dividing the spore into two unequal cells, 12-15 X 4-/«.
On species of Boletus, Type locality : France.
Distribution : Connecticut to Virginia, Wisconsin, and Colorado ; also in Europe.
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bibliographic citation
Fred Jay Seaver, Helen Letitia Palliser, David Griffiths. 1910. HYPOCREALES, FIMETARIALES. North American flora. vol 3(1). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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Hypomyces chrysospermus

provided by wikipedia EN

Hypomyces chrysospermus, the bolete eater, is a parasitic ascomycete fungus that grows on bolete mushrooms, turning the afflicted host a whitish, golden yellow, or tan color. It is found in Eurasia[2] and North America, as well as southwest Western Australia. Unlike the related Lobster mushroom, H. lactifluorum, the bolete eater and its afflicted host mushrooms are inedible.

Taxonomy

Hypomyces chrysospermus was first described by French mycologists, brothers Louis René and Charles Tulasne in 1860. Common names include bolete eater,[3] and bolete mould.[4]

The bolete eater belongs to a genus of parasitic ascomycetes, each of which infects differing genera of fungi. For example, H. lactifluorum attacks mushrooms of the family Russulaceae, H. copletus and H. transformans infect Suillus species, H. melanocarpus prefers Tylopilus species, while other Hypomyces have a much broader host range.[5]

Description

Ascus and spores

The bolete eater infects boletes, initially with a thin whitish layer which then becomes golden and finally a reddish-brown pimpled appearance. The bolete's flesh softens and is putrescent by the third stage. Single or multiple boletes may be infected, members of Paxillus and Rhizopogon are also attacked.[3]

The spores are oval-shaped and smooth in the white stage and measure 10–30 by 5–12 μm, and are warty, round and thicker-walled in the yellow stage and are 10–25 μm in diameter. These two stages are asexual, while the final stage is sexual; here the spores are spindle-shaped and measure 25–30 by 5–6 μm.[3]

Distribution and habitat

Hypomyces chrysospermus is found in North America,[3] and Europe, where it is common.[4] It is common in the southwest of Western Australia, where it is found in forest and coastal plant communities.[6] It is also found in the Eastern Chinese provinces of Hebei, Jiangsu, Anhui, and Fujian.[2]

Usage

As mentioned earlier, H. chrysospermus is not edible and may be poisonous.[3][4] The bolete eater is used in Chinese herbal medicine to stop and heal external bleeding, primarily through direct, topical application of the spore onto open wounds or cuts.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Hypomyces chrysospermus Tul. & C. Tul. 1860". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2011-07-01.
  2. ^ a b c Ying, Jianzhe (1987). Icons of medicinal fungi from China. Beijing, China: Science Press. pp. 575 (page 545). ISBN 9787030001955.
  3. ^ a b c d e Arora, David (1986). Mushrooms demystified: a comprehensive guide to the fleshy fungi (2nd ed.). Berkeley: Ten Speed Press. p. 883. ISBN 0-89815-169-4.
  4. ^ a b c Roger Phillips (2006). Mushrooms. Pan MacMillan. p. 352. ISBN 0-330-44237-6.
  5. ^ Douhan GW, Rizzo DM. (2003). "Host-parasite relationships among bolete infecting Hypomyces species". Mycological Research. 107 (Pt 11): 1342–49. doi:10.1017/S0953756203008542. PMID 15000236.
  6. ^ Robinson, Richard (2003). Fungi of the South-West Forests. Perth, Western Australia: Department of Conservation and land Management. pp. 68–69. ISBN 0-7307-5528-2.
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Hypomyces chrysospermus: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Hypomyces chrysospermus, the bolete eater, is a parasitic ascomycete fungus that grows on bolete mushrooms, turning the afflicted host a whitish, golden yellow, or tan color. It is found in Eurasia and North America, as well as southwest Western Australia. Unlike the related Lobster mushroom, H. lactifluorum, the bolete eater and its afflicted host mushrooms are inedible.

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