Galerina

Galerina
Galerina marginata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Hymenogastraceae
(formerly Cortinariaceae)
Genus: Galerina
Earle (1909)
Type species
Galerina vittiformis
(Fr.) Singer (1950)
Subgenera

Galerina Kühner
Naucoriopsis Kühner
Tubariopsis Kühner

Synonyms[1]
  • Galerula P.Karst. (1879)
  • Pholidotopsis Earle (1909)
  • Velomycena Pilát (1953)

Galerina is a genus of small brown-spored saprobic mushrooms, with over 300 species found throughout the world, from the far north to remote Macquarie Island in the Southern Ocean.[2][3] Species are typically small and hygrophanous, with a slender and brittle stem. They are often found growing on wood, and when on the ground have a preference for mossy habitats. This group is most noted for toxic species which are occasionally confused with hallucinogenic species of Psilocybe.

Galerina means helmet-like.[4]

Taxonomic definition

The genus Galerina is defined as small mushrooms of mycenoid stature, that is, roughly similar in form to Mycena species: a small conical to bell-shaped cap, and gills attached to a long and slender cartilaginous stem. Species have a pileipellis that is a cutis, and ornamented spores that are brown in deposit, where the spore ornamentation comes from an extra spore covering.

Description

Galerina sp. Marriott Falls Track, Tasmania, Australia

Galerina fruiting bodies are typically small, undistinguished mushrooms with a typical "little brown mushroom" morphology and a yellow-brown, light brown to cinnamon-brown spore print. The pileus is typically glabrous and often hygrophanous, and a cortina-type veil is present in young specimens of roughly half of recognized species, though it sometimes disappears as the mushroom ages in many of these species. Microscopically, they are highly variable as well, though most species have spores that are ornamented, lack a germ pore, and have a plage. Many species also have characteristic tibiiform cystidia. However, there are many exceptions, and many species of Galerina lack one or more of these microscopic characteristics. Ecologically, all Galerina are saprobic, growing in habitats like rotting wood or in moss.[2]

The spores of Galerina feature an ornamentation that comes from the outer layer of the spore breaking up on maturity to produce either warts, wrinkles or "ears", flaps of material loosened from where the spore was attached to the basidia. This outer layer of the spore often is not complete, but has a clear patch in many species just above the attachment, this clear patch is called a plage. This plage is not evident in all species, and the spore covering does not always breakup in all species, making it sometimes difficult to correctly determine a mushroom of this genus.

The specific features that define the genus require a microscope to confirm. In the wild it can be difficult to determine a Galerina from a number of similar genera, such as Pholiota, Tubaria, Conocybe, Pholiotina, Agrocybe, Gymnopilus, Phaeogalera and Psilocybe. For the most part, Galerinas will be found associated with moss, and this can separate out the genus in nature fairly well. But this identification is more difficult in the section Naucoriopsis, which does not associate with moss, and is a decomposer of wood.

Phaeogalera is a genus that was segregated from Galerina by Kühner.[5]

Phylogenetics

Galerina has recently been found to be polyphyletic,[2] consisting of at least three unrelated clades, although not all species were studied and for most currently recognized species is uncertain still in which they belong. Each of these clades corresponds to a subgenus of Galerina, as outlined by Kühner.[5] The great diversity of micromorphology found in Galerina is probably due to the polyphyly of the genus.

Chemistry and toxicology

Many (though not all) Galerina contain alpha-amanitin and other amatoxins.[6] Galerina steglichii is very rare, bruises blue and contains the hallucinogen psilocybin.[7][8]

Galerina sp.
View the Mycomorphbox template that generates the following list

Mycological characteristics

gills on hymenium
cap is convex
hymenium is adnexed

stipe has a ring

or is bare

spore print is yellow-orange

to brown
ecology is saprotrophic
edibility: deadly

Identification

The extreme toxicity of some Galerina species means that recognition of Galerina is of great importance to mushroom hunters who are seeking hallucinogenic Psilocybe mushrooms. Species like Galerina marginata may bear a superficial resemblance to Psilocybe cyanescens and other "psilocybe" species, and has often been found growing amongst and around "psilocybe cyanescens" and other "psilocybe" species, making identification all the more confusing to the uninitiated. Galerina can be distinguished from psilocybin Psilocybe by the following characteristics:

Although these rules are specific to the separation of Galerina from certain Psilocybe, since mixed patches of Psilocybe and Galerina can occur, it is essential to be sure of the identity of each sporocarp collected.

Galerina also present some risk of confusion with several species of small edible mushrooms, notably Kuehneromyces mutabilis and candy caps (L. camphoratus and allies).[11][12]

Notable species

Galerina vittiformis is the type species of the genus Galerina. This species is common in beds of damp moss (along with many other species of Galerina). There are a number of variations of this species that have been named over the years: var. vittiformis f. vittiformis is a 2-spored species; var. vittiformis f. tetrasporis is a 4-spored form; var. pachyspora has been collected on Macquarie Island.[3]

Galerina marginata (also known as autumn skullcap, or deadly galerina) is a poisonous species[13] found throughout the temperate regions of the world, in habitats as diverse as forests and urban parklands, wherever rotting wood is found. DNA studies[14] found that Galerina autumnalis and five other species of Galerina with similar morphologies were, in fact, synonyms of Galerina marginata.

Galerina sulciceps, a lethal species found in Indonesia and responsible for deaths there. One study found it more toxic than Amanita phalloides.[15]

Galerina patagonica has a Gondwanan distribution.[16]

Several Galerina species are listed by the US Forest Service as "species of special concern" in the Northwest Forest Plan.[17] These species are considered indicator species for old growth coniferous forest in the Pacific Northwest: Galerina atkinsonia,[18] Galerina cerina,[19] Galerina heterocystis,[19] Galerina sphagnicola,[19] and Galerina vittiformis.[20]

References

  1. "Galerina Earle 1909". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  2. 1 2 3 Gulden G, Stensrud K, Shalchian-Tabrizi K, Kauserud H (2005). "Galerina Earle: A polyphyletic genus in the consortium of dark-spored agarics" (PDF). Mycologia. 97 (4): 823–837. doi:10.3852/mycologia.97.4.823. PMID 16457352.
  3. 1 2 Wood AE. (2001). "Studies in the genus Galerina (Agaricales) in Australia". Australian Systematic Botany. 14 (4): 615–676. doi:10.1071/SB99016.
  4. Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians by William C. Roody
  5. 1 2 Kühner R. (1972). "Agaricales de la zone alpine: Genres Galera Earle et Phaeogalera gen. nov". Bulletin Trimestriel de la Société Mycologique de France. 88: 41–153.
  6. Enjalbert F, Cassanas G, Rapior S, Renault C, Chaumont JP (2004). "Amatoxins in wood-rotting Galerina marginata" (PDF). Mycologia. 96 (4): 720–729. doi:10.2307/3762106. JSTOR 3762106. PMID 21148893.
  7. Gartz J. (1995). "Cultivation and analysis of Psilocybe species and an investigation of Galerina steglichi". Annali Museo Civico di Rovereto. 10: 297–306.
  8. Besl H. (1993). "Galerina steglichii spec. nov, ein halluzinogener Haeubling". Zeitschrift für Mykologie. 59: 215–218.
  9. Stamets P. (1996). Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World: An Identification Guide. Berkeley, California: Ten Speed Press. p. 53. ISBN 0-89815-839-7.
  10. Kuo M. (2004). "Galerina marginata ("Galerina autumnalis")". MushroomExpert.com.
  11. Campbell D. (2004). "The candy cap complex" (PDF). Mycena News. 55 (3): 3–4. Retrieved 2015-06-07. (scroll down)
  12. Kuo M. (2007). "Lactarius camphoratus". MushroomExpert.com. Retrieved 2009-02-16.
  13. Enjalbert F, Cassanas G, Rapior S, Renault C, Chaumont J-P., F.; Cassanas; Rapior; Renault; Chaumont (2004). "Amatoxins in wood-rotting Galerina marginata". Mycologia. 96 (4): 720729. doi:10.2307/3762106. PMID 21148893.
  14. Gulden G, Dunham S, Stockman J (2001). "DNA studies in the Galerina marginata complex". Mycological Research. 105 (4): 432–440. doi:10.1017/S0953756201003707.
  15. Klán J. (1993). "Prehled hub obsahujících amanitiny a faloidiny [A review of mushrooms containing amanitins and phalloidines]". Časopis Lékařů Českých. 132 (15): 449–451.
  16. Laursen GA, Horak E, Taylor DL (2005). "Galerina patagonica Singer from Gondwanian mainland AU and NZ, their subantarctic islands, and Patagonia". Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Mycological Society of Japan. 49: 149.
  17. Castellano MA, Cázares E, Fondrick B, Dreisbach T (2003). "Part 1". Handbook to additional fungal species of special concern in the Northwest Forest Plan (General Technical Report PNW-GTR-572) (PDF). Portland, OR: USDA, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. p. 144 p. (Hereafter referred to as "Castellano, et al. 2003.")
  18. Castellano, et al. 2003. Part 4.
  19. 1 2 3 Castellano, et al. 2003. Part 5.
  20. Castellano, et al. 2003. Part 6.

Further reading

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