Spherical or cobblestone-like or spotted/pimpled crust <perithecial>


The bulk of the fungi in this sub-group produce perithecia as fruit bodies. A perithecium is a roughly spherical chamber within which you find the spore producing organs and there is an apical hole (or ostiole) through which the spores escape from the perithecium. In many species you see the ostiole as a tiny, pimple-like protrusion (and sometimes you will need a handlens to see it clearly).

 

Perithecia are small, from under a millimetre to about 2 millimetres in diameter. Mostly they are black and hard (but brittle – apply enough pressure and you’ll shatter one), however, there are also soft or coloured perithecia.

 

They may appear sparsely over the wood, in gregarious colonies (but with the individual perithecia still clearly distinct) or in stromata. In a stroma the perithecia are embedded within a communal matrix. Stromata may be two dimensional (e.g. a crust or cushion on the wood) or three dimensional (e.g. a golfball-sized lump on the wood). In some stroma-forming species you find a pigmented layer making up the outer surface of the stroma.


Spherical or cobblestone-like or spotted/pimpled crust <perithecial>

Announcements

21 Feb 2025

Hello NatureMaprs!This is an appeal to any current moderators or those looking to become a moderator. NatureMapr is now recieving an increased number of sightings from the NSW North Coast region (exci...


Continue reading

NatureMapr partners with NSW BCT on next phase of Land Libraries

Minor improvements

I'm glad we got attacked - platform outage update

Change to user profile page structure

Discussion

Teresa wrote:
23 Feb 2025
Terrific, hopefully it may smell like curry.

Unidentified Spherical or cobblestone-like or spotted/pimpled crust <perithecial>
Topwood wrote:
22 Feb 2025
No I didn't but I did not go up and actually smell it, next time I will.

Unidentified Spherical or cobblestone-like or spotted/pimpled crust <perithecial>
Teresa wrote:
22 Feb 2025
Possibly a Piptoporus australiensis - did you notice any odour with this one?

Unidentified Spherical or cobblestone-like or spotted/pimpled crust <perithecial>
Heino1 wrote:
8 Jul 2022
The asexual state (rather non-descript grey-green 'fingers') are present (especially in the final photo).

Hypoxylon howeianum
Heino1 wrote:
15 Dec 2021
This could be an Annulohypoxylon but the genus Daldinia is another possibility. You find the most striking feature of Daldinia by looking at a cross section. Internally it is concentrically banded in several alternating layers of black and white.

Daldinia group, spherical
825,716 sightings of 21,570 species from 13,400 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.