TEST

Oedohysterium sinense

 

 

The fruit body is black, hard, generally 0.5-2 millimetres in length, much narrower than long, not taller than wide and with a fissure running along the length of the fruit body. The fruit bodies usually appear in large groups. Technically this type of fruit body is called a hysterothecium and hysterothecial fungi are ascomycetes. Hysterothecial fungi are fairly common but easily overlooked. Often you find them on hard, weathered wood in exposed habitats (e.g. on old wooden fence-posts, power poles or paling fences).

 

Oedohysterium sinense is a cosmopolitan species.

 

Look-alikes

There are about a dozen genera in the families Hysteriaceae and Gloniaceae with such hysterothecia and identification of genera relies heavily on spore features.

 

The features of Oedohysterium are: Spores brown and commonly with at least 6-8 cross-wise septa and with a swollen cell alongside the near-central constriction. Closest to Oedohysterium sinense (spores mostly 38-50 x 11-15 microns) is Oedohysterium insidiens (spores mostly 23-28 x 7-10 microns), another cosmopolitan species.    

 

Other hysterothecial genera on Canberra Nature Map

Gloniopsis

Hysterium

Hysterobrevium

 

Oedohysterium sinense is listed in the following regions:

Canberra & Southern Tablelands

Page 1 of 1 - image sightings only

Species information

  • Oedohysterium sinense Scientific name
  • Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Local native
  • Non-Invasive
  • Machine learning

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