Coral Fungi: information below is from Botany 359; however, most of information can be used in Botany 360


Clavariaceae: hymenophore amphigenous (i.e. located on all surfaces of the basidiocarp) and basidiocarp negatively geotropic (i.e., growing away from the ground); monomitic; spores smooth or echinulate

Clavulina cristata- macroscopically, usually identified by the multibranched tips; microscopically the basidium has extremely long sterigma which typically number only 2 for each basidium. Macroscopic features that work most of the time: Ramaria: blunt-tips, fruiting body stains with ferric sulphate; Clavaria unbranched on the west coast (C. zollingeri is on the east coast), branches slender and fragile; Clavariadelphus unbranched and branches fleshy and thick or trumpet-shape; Ramariopsis kunzei milk-white fruiting boides and branches very fragile; Multiclavula club-shaped, fruiting bodies on cut road banks and only about 1-2 " tall; associated with an alga; Typhula unbranched, branches very thin and almost thread-like; growing in humus beneath hardwoods.

Ramaria
stuntzii
Ramaria
pinicola
Clavaria
vermicularis
Clavaria
purpurea
Clavaria
zollingeri
Clavariadelphus
pistillaris
Clavariadelphus
taxophila
Ramariopsis
kunzei
Typhula Multiclavula


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