New reports, phylogenetic analysis, and a key to Lactarius Pers. in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem informed by molecular data
Author
Barge, Edward G.
Author
Cripps, Cathy L.
text
MycoKeys
2016
15
1
58
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.15.9587
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.15.9587
1314-4049-15-1
Taxon
classification Fungi Russulales Russulaceae
3.
Lactarius glyciosmus (Fr.) Fr.
Figure 5
Lactarius glyciosmus
The following morphological description includes data from Colorado specimens listed in
Barge et al. (2016)
.
Description.
Pileus 15-50 mm in diameter, broadly convex, later becoming plane with or without a depressed center and small papilla, smooth, dry, azonate to lightly zoned especially near the margin, pale gray-brown to violet-brown with a whitish glaucous coating when immature, fading in age; margin incurved when young and remaining so or becoming straight in age. Lamellae adnate to subdecurrent, subdistant to crowded, cream to pale pinkish to pale yellow-orange. Stipe 10-40
x
3-12 mm, equal to slightly clavate, central to eccentric, smooth, dry, buff or pale salmon with a faint glaucous coating at first as in pileus, stuffed, becoming hollow, often white-mycelioid toward the base. Context pale cream. Latex scarce to undetectable, watery, white, unchanging. Odor of coconut. Taste mild to slightly acrid.
Basidiospores 7-9
x
5-7
µm
, Q = 1.2-1.4, broadly ellipsoid to ellipsoid, ornamentation forming an incomplete to nearly complete reticulum. Pleuromacrocystidia 45.5-63.5
x
6.5-7.5
µm
, scarce to scattered, subclavate to lanceolate; apex rounded to mucronate. Cheilomacrocystidia 33-66
x
5-9
µm
, scattered to abundant, cylindrical to subclavate; apex rounded.
Ecology and distribution.
Widespread in the Northern Hemisphere in temperate, boreal, and arctic-alpine areas with
Betula
. In the GYE and elsewhere in the Rocky Mountains, it occurs in subalpine and alpine areas with
Betula glandulosa
and possibly other
Betula
spp., late summer.
Specimens examined.
U.S.A. MONTANA: Carbon County, Beartooth Plateau, Birch Site, near
Betula glandulosa
, 29 July 1997, CLC1134 = ZT6096 (MONT); 8 Aug 1998, CLC1217 (MONT); 10 Aug 1999, TWO269 (MONT); 19 Aug 1999, CLC1380 (MONT); 13 Aug 2007, ZT12723 (MONT); Carbon County, Hellroaring Plateau, Hellroaring Creek, near
Betula glandulosa
, 9 Aug 2015, EB111-15 (MONT). WYOMING: Park County, Beartooth Plateau, Island Lake, near
Betula glandulosa
, 6 Sept 2015, EB160-15 (MONT).
Discussion.
Lactarius glyciosmus
is very closely related to
Lactarius mammosus
Fr. (Figure 2A), however, the latter has a browner pileus, stouter stature, and ecology with
Pinaceae
(although it has been reported with
Betula
) (
Heilmann-Clausen et al. 1998
).
Lactarius vietus
(Fr.) Fr. has a distinct pale zone near the stipe apex, latex that dries greenish gray, longer pleuromacrocystidia (50-90
x
7-12
µm
), a mild to slightly fruity odor, and a strongly acrid taste (
Heilmann-Clausen et al. 1998
). The presence of
Lactarius mammosus
and
Lactarius vietus
in the Rocky Mountains is unclear.
Lactarius trivialis
(Fr.) Fr., which has been reported from the GYE (
McKnight 1982
), but could not be confirmed, is typically larger with slightly larger basidiospores (7.3-10
x
5.9-7.8
µm
), more numerous pleuromacrocystidia, and a mild to acidic-fruity odor (
Heilmann-Clausen et al. 1998
).
Lactarius nanus
has larger basidiospores (7
-10.5(-
12)
x
5-8
µm
), larger and differently shaped pleuromacrocystidia (53
-96.5(-
114)
x
6.5-11.5
µm
), a mild odor, and associates with
Salix
.
Figure 5.
Lactarius glyciosmus
. Collection EB111-15 under
Betula glandulosa
, Hellroaring Plateau, Montana, USA. Scale bar: 2 cm. Photo by E. Barge.