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Crucibulum laeve
(Huds.: Relh) Kambly
Univ. of Iowa Stud. Nat. Hist. 17(4): 167. 1936.
Common Name: Bird's Nest Fungus
Sporocarp
Fruiting body cup-shaped, sessile, tough, persistent, 3-7 mm high, 3-6 mm wide, globose, becoming cylindrical, narrowed at the base, flaring at the mouth, the latter covered with an ochraceous, velvety, evanescent lid (epiphragm); outer surface roughened to finely wrinkled, buff-brown, inner surface smooth, pale grey to light-brown; peridioles (eggs) 1-2 mm broad, flattened, white to pallid, connected to the cup by a thin cord (funiculus).
Spores
Spores 7.5-10 x 4-6 µm, elliptical, smooth, nonamyloid.
Habitat
Scattered to clustered on soil and woody debris, e.g. sticks, rotting plywood, etc.
Edibility
Unknown, but too small and tough to be of culinary value.
Comments
Bird's nest fungi are represented by about six or seven species in the San Francsico Bay Area with Crucibuum laevae being one of the most likely to be
encountered. It is distinguished by a buff-brown, thin-walled, flaring cup
with a smooth interior, and pallid to white eggs that are connected to the
cup via a thin cord. Related local bird's nests include species of Cyathus
and Nidula, all of which have thicker-walled cups. In addition, the cups
and peridioles of Cyathus species are darker (grey-brown to dark-grey),
while Nidula species have peridioles which are embedded in a gelatinous
matrix.
Other Descriptions and Photos
- Fred Stevens: Crucibulum laeve (CP)
- Michael Wood: Crucibulum laeve (CP) -- brightly colored young sporocarps
- R. A. Chilton: Crucibulum laeve (CP)
- George Barron's Fungi of Canada (East): Crucibulum laeve (D & CP)
- Arora (1985): p. 779 (D)
- Breitenbach & Kränzlin (vol. 2): sp. 493 (D, I, & CP)
- Brodie: p. 148 (D), fig. 53 (P)
- Jordan: p. 363 (D & CP)
- Lincoff: p. 828 (D), plate 633 (CP)
- Phillips: p. 288 (CP), p. 289 (D)
- Smith & Weber: sp. 279 (D & CP)
(D=Description; I=Illustration; P=Photo; CP=Color Photo)
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