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Helvella monachella, Cooke illustration

Classification

Examples of macroscopic features

This section will illustrate a number of the macroscopic features that have been used in fungal classification or identification. The list is certainly not comprehensive, but you will get a good idea of the range of features. So, the next time you see a mushroom, polypore, puffball or whatever, you may look at it with new eyes and see features you hadn’t thought of before – and you’ll undoubtedly see features that aren’t mentioned here.

There are technical names for many of the things described below but, for the most part, the technical terms are omitted. They are not essential here for the aim is simply to familiarise you with the nature (not the jargon) of many identification features. reference linkYou can find the technical terms in many fungal books, such as the references given here.

Through the 1800s and into the early 1900s, fungal classification relied heavily on the macroscopic features of the fruiting body, though the late 1800s saw increasing attention given to microscopic features. In the 1900s the microscopic features became more important so, while all of the features mentioned below are still very useful for identification, their role in classification is often much reduced.

Of prime importance is the type of fruiting body (e.g. mushroom, puffball, cup fungus, polypore, etc (SEE TYPES OF FUNGI SECTION).

illustrationEven within any single type of fruiting body there may be much variation in shape. For example, while all mushrooms have gills under their caps - mushrooms come in many shapes and sizes. The caps may be steeply conical, hemispherical, slightly convex, flat, flat with a central hump (a bit like a sombrero) or funnel shaped. The stems may be cylindrical, narrower at the top, narrower at the bottom, bowing in the middle, cylindrical except for a swollen ball-like base - or there's no stem at all and the cap simply grows out of a piece of wood. The caps may be just a few millimetres in diameter or many centimetres in diameter and the stems may be solid or hollow inside. The accompanying diagram shows some of the possibilities.

Sometimes you will need to look at both young and old specimens. The young mushrooms of Cortinarius archeri click to see photo are a striking purple but they become brownish when older. These young Inkcap mushrooms click to see photo, growing on a rotting hay bale, have noticeably shaggy caps but in these older caps click to see photo the shagginess has begun to disappear and soon there would be no trace left. I'll finish with three views of a species of Psathyrella - the very young mushrooms click to see photo only two to three millimetres tall, an older specimen click to see photo with the stem about a centimetre long and four mature specimens, click to see photo the caps about two centimetres in diameter.

These photos show species of Crepidotus click to see photo and Resupinatus click to see photo. Both grow on dead wood and neither has a stem. In the former the cap is attached at it’s edge and in the latter the cap is attached by its top. The fruiting bodies of Campanella, like those of Resupinatus, are stem-less mushrooms that typically grow on the underside of dead wood lying on the ground. however, while Resupinatus has fairly standard gills, radiating from the point where the cap is attached tot he wood, Campanella is different. Here are two specimens, one brown click to see photo and the other white click to see photo, both collected on Norfolk Island. While each has a few radial gills, there are also numerous cross-connections between the gills.

Some mushrooms have a skirt of tissue (called a ring or annulus) around the stem, as shown in this picture of an Agaricus species click to see photo. Another feature possessed by some mushrooms is a cup-like structure (or volva) around the base of the stem, as shown in this photo of a species of Amanita click to see photo. Most mushroom genera have neither a ring nor a volva (with a volva being rarer than a ring). Thus the possession of one (or both) of these features is of great help in identification. Volva and ring are remnants of tissues that are present in the young stages of many mushrooms. A universal veil is a membrane that envelops the whole of the mushroom in the young, button stage. As the stem expands to raise the cap the universal veil is broken and a volva may be left as a remnant of the veil's lower part. Sometimes remnants remain on the cap as well and Amanita muscaria click to see photo is an example of this. The white flecks on the red cap are remnants of a universal veil but such a veil doesn't always leave remnants on the cap. In a number of species the upper veil tissue is shed completely, leaving a smooth cap and an example is Volvariella speciosa click to see photo, a species with a universal veil and a volva but with no veil remnants on the cap.. A partial veil covers the gills in a young mushroom. It extends from the stem to the edge of the cap and once the cap has fully expanded that veil breaks at the edge of the cap to expose the gills and the remnant hangs down around the stem as the ring. In this Amanita click to see photo the partial veil was still intact when I turned the mushroom over but I have damaged the mushroom slightly to expose some of the gills. You can see that the partial veil is membranous whereas the partial veil shown in this photo click to see photo is much flimsier, more like a thick cobweb and there are genera with even flimsier partial veils. Their are four possible combinations. A few genera possess both types of veil. There is also small number of genera with only a universal veil. A larger number of genera possess just a partial veil but most common is the absence of both veils.

Other types can also show considerable variation in shape. Consider the polypores. You can have solid, woody bracket-like forms such as Ganoderma australe click to see photo and almost paper thin, centrally-stemmed ones such as Microporus xanthopus click to see photo. You could break the latter between your fingers but you'd bruise your knuckles severely if you punched the former. Moving away from three-dimensional fruiting bodies, a polypore such as Macrohyporia dictyopora click to see photo grows sheet-like fruiting bodies at the bases of tree trunks. While all polypores have pores on the undersides of their fruiting bodies, the pores vary greatly in shape and size. In the species of Pycnoporus click to see photo the pores are more or less circular and each is around a fifth of a millimetre in diameter click to see photo. On the other hand, the pores of Hexagonia apiaria are markedly angular and from 2 to 4 millimetres in longest dimension. Here's a photo click to see photo of a fragment from a Pycnoporus fruiting body placed within a pore of Hexagonia apiaria.

While many corticioid fungi are flat and quite two-dimensional, others have wrinkles click to see photo, warts click to see photo or spines click to see photo. While the margins of many corticioid fungi are smooth there are also those which are uneven, anything from slightly fury click to see photo to having pronounced cord-like bundles of hyphae extending well-beyond the margin click to see photo.

The fruiting body of Dacryobolus sudans click to see photo is a flat sheet with numerous, crowded, creamy teeth, each about a half millimetre long. If you look with a hand lens you'll get a view much like this click to see photo which shows a small, exuded droplet of viscous liquid at the apex of each tooth. In the wild the fruiting bodies form on the underside of rotten wood, so the teeth would be pointing down. The brownish spots on the gill edges click to see photo of these mushrooms of Hebeloma crustuliniforme are dried droplets of exuded liquid.

Everyone would be aware of the multitude of colours that can be seen in the fungal world. There can be considerable variation in colours between different parts of the fruiting body – occasionally even in something like a mushroom gill. This photo shows the underside of the cap of Pluteus atromarginatus click to see photo . The gills are mostly white – but with a prominent black edge. In most mushrooms the gill edge has the same colour as the rest of the gill, but not always. It pays to look. Even when the gill edges are not so strikingly coloured they may still be differentiated from the rest of the gill. In a number of mushroom genera, the gill edges are lined with elongated colourless cells. These give the gill edges a raggedy, hoary look as shown in this photo. click to see photo

While on the subject of gills, if you look at this photo that shows the underside of a cap of Marasmius elegans click to see photo, with the bulk of the stem removed, you’ll see that while many gills reach the stem there are also minor gills which reach in only a little way from the margin. This is typical for many mushrooms. However, there are also some mushroom genera where even the main gills do not reach the stem. In this picture of an Agaricus species click to see photo you can see a prominent "gill-free" channel around the stem. So here’s another feature – either the main gills reach the stem or they don’t. If they do then they may be attached to the stem in various ways. The following diagram shows some possibilities. Each represents a side-on view of one of the main gills. It’s a stylised depiction of the sort of view you’d get if you sliced a mushroom in half, vertically. The grey areas represent the flesh of the cap and stem while the red areas show the gills. The first figure represents the Agaricus situation, where the main gills do not reach the stem. The arrow indicates the "gill-free" channel mentioned above. In the next figure the gill does reach the stem, but only slightly. The other three figures show some of the other possibilities. Finally, gills come in various shapes – not just flat-bottomed as in the following diagram. The gills of mushrooms may be simple or they may fork as you can see here click to see photo and here click to see photo. So even if you looked at just the gills – there’s a lot to be seen.

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Spore colour, as shown in a spore print, is very useful. The colour of the spore print is often different to gill colour. If you’re not familiar with spore prints see the SPORE PRINT SECTION. Sometimes spore colour shows easily in the field. In this photograph click to see photo you can see that a lot of pinkish brown spores have fallen from the upper cap onto the lower. You can also easily see the colour of massed spores in various powdery-spored fruiting bodies. Contrast the lilaceous spore mass of Calvatia lilacina click to see photo with the brown of Scleroderma click to see photo.

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Amauroderma rude

Apart from the ordinary colours of the fruiting bodies themselves, there are sometimes changes in colour when the fruiting body is damaged. For example, if you run your fingernail across the white underside of the polypore Amauroderma rude, you'll see a red line appear, as shown in the photograph (right). In various boletes the inside flesh will turn blue when exposed to air click to see photo.

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Lactarius sp.

Continuing with the theme of damage, species in the mushroom genus Lactarius will ooze a liquid when damaged. In this photo (left) you can see a small white drop of fluid on the gills, where a fingernail has been pressed into them. You can also see a similar drop of fluid on the exposed flesh of this truffle-like fungus, in the genus Zelleromyces click to see photo. Such colour changes, or bleeding, are not too common.

Fruiting bodies may be anything from dry to sticky. For example, this Hygrocybe click to see photo is exceedingly sticky. You can see a slippery, gelatinous layer over both the stem and the cap. In some sticky mushroom species the stickiness isn’t everywhere, (e.g. the cap may be sticky – but the stem dry as is the case with Suillus luteus click to see photo).

Some mushrooms have strongly pleated caps. click to see photo

If there’s a cap, is it smooth or rough (and how rough) on the upper side? The upper surface of the polypore Hexagonia apiaria is covered with very stiff, branched hairs click to see photo. Smoothness and roughness can help differentiate non-capped fungi as well. Species of Geoglossum click to see photo have smooth, black fruiting bodies while the similarly-shaped black fruiting bodies of Trichoglossum click to see photo are densely covered with short bristles.

The upper surface of Trametes versicolor click to see photo (another polypore) is covered in very short hairs, giving a velvety feel. The margin of the ascomycete Jafneadelphus ferrugineus click to see photo has a slight roughness while there are easily visible hairs around the disk of Scutellinia click to see photo. The red cap of Amanita muscaria click to see photo, while generally smooth, has small pieces of white tissue stuck to the cap. The cap of Leucocoprinus birnbaumii click to see photo has a fine, granular coating – the granules being easily rubbed off.

illustrationCoral fungi show different types of branching. Some branch in much the same way as trees, with a main trunk dividing smoothly into two or more, those later dividing smoothly again and so on. A more dramatic type of branching is what’s called pyxidate branching. Here, one level finishes in a disk-like to cup-like area and the branches for the next level start at the margins of the disk or cup. The diagram shows this in stylized form and the photo shows a close-up view of a species of Clavicorona click to see photo where you can see some very young branches developing around the rim of one of these disk-like areas.


A number of puffballs (and their close relatives) are simply bags of spores, but that’s not the case for all of these fungi. There may be a spongy base that holds up the spore-filled part, especially where the fruiting body is elongated, as in this photo. In this specimen the rounded upper part holds the spores while the cylindrical lower part is simply a supporting base .

illustration

Calvatia sp. photo right

Illustration above shows two genera with similar form.

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The spongy base has numerous air-chambers and looks a bit like solidified foam. If there is a spongy base there are two further possibilities: either there’s a definite membrane between the spongy base and the spore-filled upper section, or there isn’t. In the diagram, the spongy base is shown in greyish blue, the spores in brown and (on the right) there’s a red membrane.

While on the subject of puffballs, the skin of the spore sack often has a roughened surface when young. With age, much of that roughened surface may disappear – or be retained only on the lower half of the puffball. A close look at a number of puffball species shows a variety of causes of such roughness – e.g. simple granules, conical spines, groups of spines joined at their apices, as shown in the photo click to see photo.

An Earthstar (the genus Geastrum click to see photo) looks like a puffball on a star-like base. The spore sack may sit directly on the star-like base or be raised on a short stalk. The apical opening through which the spores are released may be a fairly simple affair click to see photo or more complex, such as the conical, pleated structure on Geastrum pectinatum click to see photo.

While the bulk of the fungi that produce spore-sacs on star-like bases are in the genus Geastrum, not all of them are. Look carefully and you may come across Myriostoma coliforme click to see photo. While a Geastrum fruiting body has just one apical spore-releasing pore, in Myriostoma coliforme there are several.

Does the fruiting body have a distinctive smell (other than ‘mushroomy’!). Is it fruity, cucumber-like, radish-like, nauseous, like stale urine, strongly reminiscent of rotten meat, musky, like marzipan? All occur in fungi.

Where are the fruiting bodies growing – in a eucalypt forest, a pine plantation, the middle of a sheep paddock or in the arid inland? On the seashore or in the alps?

What is the fruiting body growing from – wood, soil, dung (e.g. Cyathus stercoreus click to see photo ) or (like many species of Cordyceps click to see photo from insect larvae or pupae?

If it's a wood-rotting fungus - does it cause a brown rot or a white rot? White rot click to see photo leaves the wood bleached and with a stringy consistency. Brown rot click to see photo leaves the wood coloured brown and typically with extensive cracking into small and more or less cubical sections.

What is its texture – gelatinous (like Tremella fuciformis click to see photo ) fleshy, leathery or woody?

illustrationDo the fruiting bodies grow in dense clusters or isolated from each other?

This drawing, by Jim Willis (from his small book Victorian Toadstools and Mushrooms) shows a small cluster of Marasmius elegans click to see photo, with all the stems coming from a common point. A number of species characteristically grow in this fashion, with some species forming quite large clusters. This type of growth is not restricted to mushrooms. For example, some polypores also produce bracket-like fruiting bodies in dense clusters, as shown by the following photo click to see photo.

In both the drawing and photograph of Marasmius elegans you'll have seen that there are short, hairy tufts at the bases of the stems. You'll find such tufts at the bases of a number of mushrooms growing out of wood or forest litter. On the other hand, Mycena interrupta click to see photo has a small circular pad around the base of each stem. There are also many mushrooms which have no tufts or pads, but have the stems coming cleanly out of the wood.

Does the fruiting body glow in the dark, as is the case with Omphalotus nidiformis? click to see photo.

Are sclerotia present? Sclerotia are compacted masses of hyphae, used by some fungi as dormant bodies which will produce a fresh mycelium or fruiting bodies when good conditions return. This is the sclerotium of Laccocephalum mylittae click to see photo and the other photos show a sclerotium of Hypholoma tuberosum as well as a mushroom growing from such a sclerotium

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Hypholoma tuberosum sclerotium (above)
and mushroom growing from the sclerotium (right)

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If it's a wood-rotting fungus, does the mycelium colour the wood? For example, the mycelium of Chlorociboria aeruginascens click to see photo gives an aqua colour to the underlying wood click to see photo. Amongst the wood-inhabiting ascomycetes are a number of genera in which apothecia develop within the wood, the mature apothecia being exposed by shedding the outer layer of wood or bark. Propolomyces versicolor click to see photo is an example of such a species and the largest of apothecia in that photo is about a half centimetre in diameter. You can see torn edges of host tissue around the exposed white apothecial surfaces. Stictis click to see photo< is another genus with immersed apothecia, each no more than about a millimetre in diameter.

....... and the list of macroscopic features goes on and on. You'll find more in the references given earlier as well as many of the basic fungal books you'll find in libraries.

So the next time you see a mushroom, puffball, bracket fungus or any other fungal fruiting body – take your time and study it in detail. You can learn a lot by using your eyes and a magnifying glass.