The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer

Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer, formerly called Flammula conissans Fr. sensu Ricken causes a yellow stringy butt rot of several conifers in Western Canada. It is usually of infrequent occurrence in conifers, but was found to be the most important butt rot of white spruce in the Smith - Slave Lake ar...

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Main Author: Denyer, Walter Bruce Glenn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 1959
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40771
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spelling ftunivbritcolcir:oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/40771 2023-05-15T18:19:58+02:00 The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer Denyer, Walter Bruce Glenn 1959 http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40771 eng eng University of British Columbia For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. Fungi Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer Text Thesis/Dissertation 1959 ftunivbritcolcir 2019-10-15T18:08:14Z Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer, formerly called Flammula conissans Fr. sensu Ricken causes a yellow stringy butt rot of several conifers in Western Canada. It is usually of infrequent occurrence in conifers, but was found to be the most important butt rot of white spruce in the Smith - Slave Lake area of Alberta. An investigation was conducted to gain information on the biology of the fungus. The decay has a characteristic pattern caused through preference of the fungus for wood rays and early spring wood. A musty odor in decay and cultures is characteristic. The fungus invades white spruce through pressure wounds caused by root contacts but evidently does not invade recently formed wounds. The average linear rate of decay was one inch per year in two-year-old artificial infections but probably less in natural infections. The fungus decayed blocks of root and stem wood, and blocks of light and heavy density wood, slowly, but at similar rates. The occurrence of the decay was related to good sites, and non-calcareous soils with acid first mineral horizons. The mat of cultures is fine woolly, white becoming a pale yellow, growth slow. Microscopically cultures are characterized by the presence of clamp connections and allocysts. Optimum growth on malt agar occurred at 22° C. and at a pH of 4.4. Fruiting in culture was induced by aeration with nearly saturated air, a temperature of 54° F. and illumination of 8 to 30 foot candles. The fruit body of F. alnicola is a yellow mushroom which has a stipe with darker base, adnate lamellae, partial veil adhering to the edge of the pileus, hymenium without pleurocystidia; spores rusty brown, 4.5 - 5.5 x 7- 10 μovate ellipsoid, apiculate. Spores germinated on culture media only after cold treatment at -7° C. Cold treatment of spores at -18° C. inhibited germination. The fungus shows the tetrapolar type of interfertility. Parallel experiments with Flammula conissans (Fr.) Gillet were conducted to establish the two fungi as separate species. F. conissans has similar cultural characters except for a faster rate of growth and the absence of the musty odor characteristic of F. alnicola. Aeration inhibits initiation of fruiting in F. conissans. Fruit bodies are smaller, the base of the stipe is concolorous with the cap and pleurocystidia are present on the hymenium. Spores are rusty brown, 4 – 4.5 x 5.5 - 8 μ, oval oblong. F. conissans shows the tetrapolar type of fertility. Monosporous mycelia of F. alnicola and F. conissans are intersterile. F. alnicola because of its slow rate of growth and restriction to heartwood is relatively unimportant as a cause of wind throw in white spruce. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate Thesis Slave Lake University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository Canada Gillet ENVELOPE(31.383,31.383,-72.567,-72.567)
institution Open Polar
collection University of British Columbia: cIRcle - UBC's Information Repository
op_collection_id ftunivbritcolcir
language English
topic Fungi
Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
spellingShingle Fungi
Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
Denyer, Walter Bruce Glenn
The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
topic_facet Fungi
Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
description Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer, formerly called Flammula conissans Fr. sensu Ricken causes a yellow stringy butt rot of several conifers in Western Canada. It is usually of infrequent occurrence in conifers, but was found to be the most important butt rot of white spruce in the Smith - Slave Lake area of Alberta. An investigation was conducted to gain information on the biology of the fungus. The decay has a characteristic pattern caused through preference of the fungus for wood rays and early spring wood. A musty odor in decay and cultures is characteristic. The fungus invades white spruce through pressure wounds caused by root contacts but evidently does not invade recently formed wounds. The average linear rate of decay was one inch per year in two-year-old artificial infections but probably less in natural infections. The fungus decayed blocks of root and stem wood, and blocks of light and heavy density wood, slowly, but at similar rates. The occurrence of the decay was related to good sites, and non-calcareous soils with acid first mineral horizons. The mat of cultures is fine woolly, white becoming a pale yellow, growth slow. Microscopically cultures are characterized by the presence of clamp connections and allocysts. Optimum growth on malt agar occurred at 22° C. and at a pH of 4.4. Fruiting in culture was induced by aeration with nearly saturated air, a temperature of 54° F. and illumination of 8 to 30 foot candles. The fruit body of F. alnicola is a yellow mushroom which has a stipe with darker base, adnate lamellae, partial veil adhering to the edge of the pileus, hymenium without pleurocystidia; spores rusty brown, 4.5 - 5.5 x 7- 10 μovate ellipsoid, apiculate. Spores germinated on culture media only after cold treatment at -7° C. Cold treatment of spores at -18° C. inhibited germination. The fungus shows the tetrapolar type of interfertility. Parallel experiments with Flammula conissans (Fr.) Gillet were conducted to establish the two fungi as separate species. F. conissans has similar cultural characters except for a faster rate of growth and the absence of the musty odor characteristic of F. alnicola. Aeration inhibits initiation of fruiting in F. conissans. Fruit bodies are smaller, the base of the stipe is concolorous with the cap and pleurocystidia are present on the hymenium. Spores are rusty brown, 4 – 4.5 x 5.5 - 8 μ, oval oblong. F. conissans shows the tetrapolar type of fertility. Monosporous mycelia of F. alnicola and F. conissans are intersterile. F. alnicola because of its slow rate of growth and restriction to heartwood is relatively unimportant as a cause of wind throw in white spruce. Science, Faculty of Botany, Department of Graduate
format Thesis
author Denyer, Walter Bruce Glenn
author_facet Denyer, Walter Bruce Glenn
author_sort Denyer, Walter Bruce Glenn
title The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
title_short The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
title_full The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
title_fullStr The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
title_full_unstemmed The biology of Flammula alnicola (Fr.) Kummer
title_sort biology of flammula alnicola (fr.) kummer
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 1959
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/40771
long_lat ENVELOPE(31.383,31.383,-72.567,-72.567)
geographic Canada
Gillet
geographic_facet Canada
Gillet
genre Slave Lake
genre_facet Slave Lake
op_rights For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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