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<document ID-DOI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.24.12846" ID-GBIF-Dataset="bdc69035-1f62-4aff-93e0-81cbda141a5f" ID-GBIF-Taxon="132650010" ID-Pensoft-Pub="1314-4049-24-1" ModsDocAuthor="" ModsDocDate="2017" ModsDocID="1314-4049-24-1" ModsDocOrigin="MycoKeys 24" ModsDocTitle="An investigation on Mycetinis (Euagarics, Basidiomycota)" checkinTime="1502745248203" checkinUser="pensoft" docAuthor="Petersen, Ronald H. &amp; Hughes, Karen W." docDate="2017" docId="CDC8CE622C215C3E1F9A7B86E10B9E00" docLanguage="en" docName="MycoKeys 24: 1-138" docOrigin="MycoKeys 24" docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.24.12846" docTitle="Mycetinis applanatipes A. W. Wilson &amp; Desjardin. 2005" docType="treatment" docVersion="3" lastPageId="14" lastPageNumber="15" masterDocId="FF8CFFE3FFD1AB31FFB93211B73FFF8B" masterDocTitle="An investigation on Mycetinis (Euagarics, Basidiomycota)" masterLastPageNumber="138" masterPageNumber="1" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" updateTime="1643485859727" updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
<mods:mods xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
<mods:titleInfo>
<mods:title>An investigation on Mycetinis (Euagarics, Basidiomycota)</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
<mods:name type="personal">
<mods:role>
<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
</mods:role>
<mods:namePart>Petersen, Ronald H.</mods:namePart>
</mods:name>
<mods:name type="personal">
<mods:role>
<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
</mods:role>
<mods:namePart>Hughes, Karen W.</mods:namePart>
</mods:name>
<mods:typeOfResource>text</mods:typeOfResource>
<mods:relatedItem type="host">
<mods:titleInfo>
<mods:title>MycoKeys</mods:title>
</mods:titleInfo>
<mods:part>
<mods:date>2017</mods:date>
<mods:detail type="volume">
<mods:number>24</mods:number>
</mods:detail>
<mods:extent unit="page">
<mods:start>1</mods:start>
<mods:end>138</mods:end>
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<mods:url>http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.24.12846</mods:url>
</mods:location>
<mods:classification>journal article</mods:classification>
<mods:identifier type="DOI">http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.24.12846</mods:identifier>
<mods:identifier type="Pensoft-Pub">1314-4049-24-1</mods:identifier>
</mods:mods>
<treatment ID-GBIF-Taxon="132650010" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:CDC8CE622C215C3E1F9A7B86E10B9E00" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/CDC8CE622C215C3E1F9A7B86E10B9E00" lastPageId="14" lastPageNumber="15" pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
<subSubSection pageId="12" pageNumber="13" type="nomenclature">
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
<pageBreakToken pageId="12" pageNumber="13" start="start">2</pageBreakToken>
.
<taxonomicName authority="(Desjardin) A. W. Wilson &amp; Desjardin. 2005. Mycologia 97: 677." class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes (Desjardin) A.W. Wilson &amp; Desjardin. 2005. Mycologia 97: 677.</taxonomicName>
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="12" pageNumber="13" type="reference_group">
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Marasmius" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Marasmius applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Marasmius applanatipes</taxonomicName>
Basionym. Desjardin. 1985. Mycologia 77: 899-900.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="12" pageNumber="13" type="diagnosis">
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">Diagnosis.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
1) Basidiomata of small to moderate size (pileus 10-18 mm broad; stipe 30-40
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
1.5-3 mm); 2) pileus disc reddish brown, margin greyish orange; 3) strong alliaceous odor and taste; 4) entirely vestured, bicolored stipe, typically compressed; 5) cheilocystidia poorly differentiated, clavate to occasionally bifid; 6) spores broadly ellipsoid to subamygdaliform.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="12" pageNumber="13" type="description">
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">Description.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
Basidiomata (Fig. 11) of small to moderate size. Pileus 10-18 mm broad, when young strongly convex, in age becoming shallowly convex to plane, rarely shallowly everted, dry, dull, glabrous, subtly subhygrophanous; disc dark reddish brown (8F4-8) overall when young, in age disc remaining dark brown (7F4-8), brown (7E4-6) or light brown (7D5-7); margin incurved when young, becoming decurved to uplifted, entire, even, smooth to minutely rugulose-striate to short sulcate, fading to brownish gray (6C3), greyish orange (5-6B2-4) or pinkish buff. Pilus trama up to 1 mm thick, soft, brown to brownish grey. Lamellae adnate to adnexed, often attached to an adherent pseudocollarium (best seen in dried material), subdistant to distant, thick, total lamellae 40-50, through lamellae 13-16, medium broad to broad (1-2.5 mm broad), rarely anastomosing and intervenose, (fresh) at first buff or orange white (5A2) to greyish orange (5-6B3), mellowing with age, often becoming brown (7E4-5), (dried) &quot;cartridge buff&quot; 30A2, &quot;cream buff&quot; 4A4,
<normalizedToken originalValue="“chamois”">&quot;chamois&quot;</normalizedToken>
4B4; edge even, entire, wavy in age, paler than faces when dried; lamellulae in 1-2 series. Stipe 30-40
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
1.5-3(-4) mm, when young terete and equal, in age becoming compressed and often cleft, typically tapered downward, cartilaginous, hollow, non-insititious, upward pubescent, velutinous in midsection, at base subtomentose to tomentose, with tomentum intricately tangling with substrate, when young, upward buff to orange white (5A2), in age brownish orange (8E4-7), in midsection brownish grey (6C3), downward brown (6-7E5-7) to reddish brown (8E4-8), base dark brown (7B4-8) to dark reddish brown (8F4-8); medulla concolorous with stipe surface. Rhizomorphs and sterile stipes not reported. Odor and taste strongly alliaceous.
</paragraph>
<caption pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
Figure 11.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Basidiomata. Standard bars = 10 mm. DED 2330 (SFSU). Courtesy Dennis Desjardin.
</paragraph>
</caption>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection lastPageId="13" lastPageNumber="14" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" type="habitat">
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">Habitat and phenology.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
Scattered, densely gregarious to subcespitose in duff under mixed conifers (mainly species of
<taxonomicName class="Pinopsida" family="Pinaceae" genus="Pseudotsuga" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Pseudotsuga" order="Pinales" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="genus">Pseudotsuga</taxonomicName>
,
<taxonomicName class="Pinopsida" family="Pinaceae" genus="Abies" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Abies concolor" order="Pinales" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="concolor">Abies concolor</taxonomicName>
and
<taxonomicName class="Pinopsida" family="Pinaceae" genus="Pinus" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Plantae" lsidName="Pinus contorta" order="Pinales" pageId="12" pageNumber="13" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="contorta">Pinus contorta</taxonomicName>
) at elevation above 6000 feet in Sierra Nevada and Cascade Range in California; uncommon; Oct-Nov.
</paragraph>
<paragraph lastPageId="13" lastPageNumber="14" pageId="12" pageNumber="13">
Pileipellis from near pileus margin a roughly hymeniform layer -50
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
thick composed of several elements: 1) pileal hairs (Fig. 11
<normalizedToken originalValue="AD">A-D</normalizedToken>
) 30-90
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
4-6.5
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
, arising as side branches of repent subpellis hyphae, very delicately roughened, occasionally internally clamped, sometimes undulate or shallowly lobate, thin-walled; contents densely homogeneous to heterogeneous; 2) inflated hyphal termini (Figs 11
<normalizedToken originalValue="EH">E-H</normalizedToken>
, 12, 14
<normalizedToken originalValue="AB">A-B</normalizedToken>
) 24-50(-65)
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
5-14
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
, stalked, ranging from ventricose-rostrate, subglobose to elongate or complex-lobate, firm-walled, conspicuously clamped, firm-walled (wall -0.6
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
thick, hyaline; 3) similar scattered elements with dense contents, usually branched or lobate; and 4) scattered thick-walled lobate elements (Fig. 14C, D) with densely, strongly pigmented contents. Pileus trama loosely interwoven, composed of hyphae of three types: 1) filamentous, 3-8(-15)
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
diam, firm-walled, conspicuously clamped, often swollen at branch-points; 2) filamentous, 3-8
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
diam, firm-walled, delicately to coarsely encrusted (Fig. 14G, H), with crust material in scabs or spiculate deposits; and 3) lobate, free-form, firm- to thick-walled (wall -0.7
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
thick, hyaline)
<pageBreakToken pageId="13" pageNumber="14" start="start">in</pageBreakToken>
a loose textura intricata (Fig. 14F). Lamellar trama subparallel to interwoven, composed of smooth, hyaline, inamyloid, cylindric hyphae 3-4
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
broad with walls up to 0.6
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
thick; conspicuously clamped. Pleurocystidia (Fig. 15) common (but not abundant), (35-) 40-75
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
2.5-8
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
, cylindrical to narrowly clavate or occasionally subampulliform-rostrate, conspicuously clamped; contents more or less homogeneous. Basidioles subclavate, not capitulate, conspicuously clamped; contents delicately multiguttulate, increasingly so with maturity; basidia (Fig. 17
<normalizedToken originalValue="AD">A-D</normalizedToken>
) (35-)40-48(-59)
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
7-9
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
, clavate, often subcapitulate, obscurely clamped, hyaline, with granular or globular refractive contents, (1-, 2-)4-sterigmate, with sterigmata up to 6
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
long; contents coarsely multiguttulate, refringent (PhC); some collections predominantly two-spored and these with consistently larger spores. Effete basidia not collapsing after evacuation, remaining more or less intact in hymenium (
<normalizedToken originalValue="“husking”">&quot;husking&quot;</normalizedToken>
). Basidiospores (Fig. 16) (7.5-)8.7-10.2(-12)
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
4.8-6(-6.6)
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
,
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
(Q = 1.18-1.92; Qm = 1.57; Lm = 9.2
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
), pip-shaped, broadly ellipsoid to amygdaliform, hyaline, smooth, inamyloid, white in deposit. Cheilocystidia (Fig. 17
<normalizedToken originalValue="EH">E-H</normalizedToken>
) scattered, uncommon, 33-48(-56)
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
6-10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
, clavate to cylindric-subcapitulate or bifid with two lobes typically unequal in length and occasionally with a few short lateral knobs, with thin, hyaline, inamyloid walls, obscurely clamped, easily disarticulated; contents delicately to coarsely multiguttulate. Stipe medullary hyphae parallel, 2.5-12
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
diam, thin-walled (wall hyaline to pale yellowish brown, inamyloid, walls up to 0.6
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
thick), conspicuously clamped; stipe cortical hyphae 2-4.5
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
diam, strictly parallel, firm-walled, hardly pigmented, producing caulocystidia as side branches and/or hyphal termini.
<taxonomicName genus="Caulocystidia" lsidName="Caulocystidia" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" rank="genus">Caulocystidia</taxonomicName>
of upper stipe surface (Fig. 18) (26-)40-100
<normalizedToken originalValue="×">x</normalizedToken>
9-15
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
, arising as hyphal termini or side branches, broadly cylindrical, undulate, apically bluntly rounded, hyaline, perpendicular to stipe surface, narrowed somewhat at origin, firm-walled, in clusters or scabs so appearing as delicate floccose scales; contents more or less homogeneous, non-refringent (PhC); caulocystidia of basal tomentum with dark brown, evenly pigmented walls up to 1.2
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
thick.
</paragraph>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 12.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Pileipellis structures.
<normalizedToken originalValue="AD">A-D</normalizedToken>
Pileal hairs
<normalizedToken originalValue="EH">E-H</normalizedToken>
Inflated hyphal termini. Standard bars = 10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 13.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Pileipellis structures.
<normalizedToken originalValue="AD">A-D</normalizedToken>
Lobate hyphal termini
<normalizedToken originalValue="EH">E-H</normalizedToken>
Structures with dense protoplasm, usually lobate or branched. Standard bars = 10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 14.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Pileipellis and subpellis structures. A, B, E Complex lobate hyphal termini C, D Thick-walled, strongly pigmented elements F Loosely complex pileus tramal hyphae G Encrusted hyphae H Detail showing spiculate crust material. Standard bars = 10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 15.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Pleurocystidia. Standard bars = 10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 16.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Basidiospores. Standard bars = 5
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 17.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
. Basidia and cheilocystidial structures. A Monosterigmatal basidium B, C 2-sterigmate basidia D 4-sterigmate basidium
<normalizedToken originalValue="EH">E-H</normalizedToken>
Cheilocystidial structures. Standard bars = 10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
<caption pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Figure 18.
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Mycetinis applanatipes</taxonomicName>
.
<taxonomicName genus="Caulocystidia" lsidName="Caulocystidia" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" rank="genus">Caulocystidia</taxonomicName>
from stipe apex. A Caulocystidium as hyphal terminus B Caulocystidium as side branch
<normalizedToken originalValue="CE">C-E</normalizedToken>
Individual caulocystidia. Standard bars = 10
<normalizedToken originalValue="µm">µm</normalizedToken>
. DED 6628 (SFSU-F- 024637).
</paragraph>
</caption>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection lastPageId="14" lastPageNumber="15" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" type="comments">
<paragraph pageId="13" pageNumber="14">Commentary.</paragraph>
<paragraph lastPageId="14" lastPageNumber="15" pageId="13" pageNumber="14">
Numbers of through lamellae is somewhat low for
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Omphalotaceae" genus="Mycetinis" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Mycetinis" order="Agaricales" pageId="13" pageNumber="14" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="genus">Mycetinis</taxonomicName>
, but the single rank of rudimentary lamellulae is consistent with other species. Stipe length/ pileus diameter ratio is rather low (i.e. stipes are somewhat short, but robust for their
<pageBreakToken pageId="14" pageNumber="15" start="start">length</pageBreakToken>
), with several other taxa rather gracile. Habitat on mixed conifer needles is also uncommon, with several other taxa on deciduous leaves or rotten buried wood.
</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="14" pageNumber="15">
Unexpectedly, the ITS sequence of DED 6628 is close to that of
<taxonomicName genus="M." lsidName="M. prasiosmus" pageId="14" pageNumber="15" rank="species" species="prasiosmus">M. prasiosmus</taxonomicName>
from Europe (minimum percent difference = 2.19%). Numerous non-molecular characters differ, however, include basidiomatal size and stature, ecological niche and distribution.
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
<subSubSection pageId="14" pageNumber="15" type="materials_examined">
<paragraph pageId="14" pageNumber="15">Specimens examined.</paragraph>
<paragraph pageId="14" pageNumber="15">
United States, California, Placer Co., Yuba Gap, Hwy 80,
<geoCoordinate direction="north" orientation="latitude" precision="1" value="39.31546">N39°18'55.66&quot;</geoCoordinate>
,
<geoCoordinate direction="west" orientation="longitude" precision="1" value="-120.618935">W120°37'08.15&quot;</geoCoordinate>
, 6.XI.1983, coll. &amp; det. DE Desjardin (as
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Marasmiaceae" genus="Marasmius" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Marasmius applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="14" pageNumber="15" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Marasmius applanatipes</taxonomicName>
), DED 2469 (SFSU-F- 024633) California, Sierras Co., Chapman Creek Campground, off Hwy 49,
<geoCoordinate direction="north" orientation="latitude" precision="1" value="39.630512">N39°37'49.85&quot;</geoCoordinate>
,
<geoCoordinate direction="west" orientation="longitude" precision="925" value="-120.53333">W120°32'</geoCoordinate>
37.80, 4.X.1997, coll. Desjardin &amp; Perry, det. DE Desjardin, DED 6628 (SFSU-F-024637); Sierra County, Yuba Pass,
<geoCoordinate direction="north" orientation="latitude" precision="1" value="35.323235">N35°19'23.65&quot;</geoCoordinate>
,
<geoCoordinate direction="west" orientation="longitude" precision="1" value="-120.599144">W120°35'56.92&quot;</geoCoordinate>
, 8.X.1983, coll. &amp; det. DE Desjardin, DED 2330 (as
<taxonomicName class="Agaricomycetes" family="Marasmiaceae" genus="Marasmius" higherTaxonomySource="CoL" kingdom="Fungi" lsidName="Marasmius applanatipes" order="Agaricales" pageId="14" pageNumber="15" phylum="Basidiomycota" rank="species" species="applanatipes">Marasmius applanatipes</taxonomicName>
)(SFSU-F- 000646; holotype p.p.); Siskiyou Co., vic. Callahan [
<geoCoordinate direction="north" orientation="latitude" precision="15" value="40.3125">N40°18'45&quot;</geoCoordinate>
,
<geoCoordinate direction="west" orientation="longitude" precision="15" value="-122.80139">W122°48'05&quot;</geoCoordinate>
], Carter Meadow, 20 mi W of Weed, 1.X.1983, coll. &amp; det. DE Desjardin, DED 2236 (SFSU-F- 024634).
</paragraph>
</subSubSection>
</treatment>
</document>