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Calostoma lutescens

Calostoma lutescens

Photo by flowntheloop
Published on Project Noah
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34.58, -84.69

Spotting Video

Field Notes

Description:

2 gasterocarps consisting of spherical gleba (spore sacs) covered in a yellow peridium atop tall golden stalks of intertwined hyphae that look similar to pasta or spaghetti squash. At the apex of each gleba are pink to red star-shaped pores. Spores are white to gray.

Calostoma lutescens is one of the 20 gasteroid fungi belonging to the suborder Sclerodermatineae within the order Boletales. It is believed that fungi within the Calostoma genus underwent diversification within the Boletales order from end of the Cretaceous period through the middle of the Cenozoic era. C. lutescens is ectomycorrhizal with Quercus (oak) species.

Habitat:

The side of a ridge growing under an oak (in soil) in a dense mixed hardwood forest in Northwest Georgia

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Comments (4)

Thank you, António!! I thought they were very interesting!

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