Yellow earth tongue

Spathularia flavida

''Spathularia flavida'', commonly known as the yellow earth tongue, the yellow fan, or the fairy fan, is an ascomycete fungus found in coniferous forests of Asia, Europe and North America. It produces a small, fan- or spoon-shaped fruit body with a flat, wavy or lobed cream to yellow colored "head" raised on a white to cream stalk. The height is usually approximately 2–5 cm , and up to 8 cm . The fungus fruits on the ground in mosses, forest duff or humus, and fruit bodies may occur singly, in large groups, or in fairy rings. The spores produced by the fungus are needle-like, and up to 95 micrometers long. Several varieties have been described that differ largely in their microscopic characteristics. ''S. flavida'' has been described by authorities variously as inedible, of unknown edibility, or edible but tough.
Fairy Fans! Quite the common name and quite imaginative!                      Canada,Fall,Geotagged,Spathularia flavida,Yellow earth tongue

Appearance

The fan- or spoon-shaped fruit bodies of ''S. flavida'' may be up to 8 cm high, although a range between 2–5 cm is more typical. Occasionally, fruit bodies are produced with the "head" split into two separate lobes. The color is light to strong yellow, the flattened fertile area at times paler; the color tends to deepen with the age of the fruit body. The fertile area is often irregularly wrinkled and sometimes notched at apex, and is up to 2 cm wide; it tapers down the length of either side of the stem from a half to a third of the total stem length. The division between the head and the stem is sharply defined. The stem is hollow, smooth , and has a white to yellowish mycelium at its base. The flesh of the fruit body is whitish, but becomes yellowish-brown when dry.

The edibility of ''Spathularia flavida'' is variously described as untested, unknown, or "edible, but rather tough". The small size would likely discourage table use. The odor and taste are not distinctive.In mass, the spores appear yellowish-brown, especially when they are dry. Viewed under the microscope, they appear hyaline . The spores are variable in size, but typically in the range of 30–95 by 1.5–2.5 µm. They may be non-or several septate, slender and pointed , and have an outer wall with a gelatinous layer. The asci are club-shaped, with dimensions of 85–125 by 8–12 µm. The asci do not have a covering lid known as an operculum. The paraphyses are filamentous, and hyaline ; some are ring-shaped .
Yellow earth tongue  Fall,Geotagged,Spathularia flavida,United States

Naming

The species was first described in 1774 by the German botanist Jacob Christian Schäffer. Schaeffer gave it the binomial ''Elvella clavata'', and called it ''Der keulenförmige Faltenschwamm'' in the vernacular. In 1794, Christian Hendrik Persoon published ''Spathularia flavida'' as a ''nomen novum'' , as Schaeffer's published name was not legitimate. Elias Fries sanctioned this name in the first edition of his ''Systema Mycologicum'' . According to the taxonomical database MycoBank, additional synonyms include ''Boletus elvela'' as defined by August Johann Georg Karl Batsch in 1783, and ''Spathularia clavata'' published by Pier Andrea Saccardo in 1889. In a 1955 publication, American mycologist Edwin Butterworth Mains considered Charles Horton Peck's 1903 ''Mitruliopsis flavida'' to be the same species as ''S. flavida''.

The mushroom is commonly known as the "yellow earth tongue", "yellow fan", of "fairy fan". Samuel Gray called it the "yellowish spatula-stool" in his 1821 ''Natural Arrangement of British plants''. The specific epithet ''flavida'' is Latin for "blonde" or "golden yellow".''Spathularia flavida'' may be distinguished from the velvet-foot fairy fan by differences in the stem: ''S. velutipes'' is fuzzy and brown rather than smooth and yellowish. The fuzziness is a result of a thin layer of intertwined hyphae that cover the stem, which project short hyphae outward from the surface. The closely related species ''S. neesi'' has an ochre color, spores that measure 60–80 by 1.5–2 µm, and paraphyses that are branched on the upper parts. ''Neolecta irregularis'' is roughly similar in appearance to ''S. flavida'', but lacks a sharply differentiated, spoon-shaped head, has a stem lighter in color than the head, and microscopically, has much smaller oval to elliptical spores that measure 5.5–8.5 by 3–4 µm. Another yellowish earth-tongue fungus, ''Microglossum rufum'', has a well-defined oval to spoon-shaped head, and sausage- to spindle-shaped spores that are 18–38 by 4–6 µm.
Yellow Earth Tongues uncommon Geotagged,Spathularia flavida,United States

Distribution

The fruit bodies grow scattered or in groups on forest duff or humus under conifers, summer and fall, and may grow in rings or arcs. Thought to be a saprobic species , it has also been found on rotten wood. The fungus is able to protect itself from mycophagy by the springtail ''Ceratophysella denisana'', a common mushroom feeder, by releasing repellent odorous compounds when it is injured.

A cosmopolitan and widespread species, ''S. flavida'' is common in temperate regions such as the Pacific Northwest region of North America, extending north to Alaska; it is, however, unknown in Mexico. In Europe, it has been collected from Britain, Germany, Spain, Austria, Belgium, Scandinavia, and Italy; in Asia, it has been reported from India Japan, and Turkey. ''Spathularia flavida'' is considered a protected species in Slovakia. One field guide says of this species, "that one is apt to see [it] while down on the ground looking for something else."

Habitat

The fruit bodies grow scattered or in groups on forest duff or humus under conifers, summer and fall, and may grow in rings or arcs. Thought to be a saprobic species , it has also been found on rotten wood. The fungus is able to protect itself from mycophagy by the springtail ''Ceratophysella denisana'', a common mushroom feeder, by releasing repellent odorous compounds when it is injured.

A cosmopolitan and widespread species, ''S. flavida'' is common in temperate regions such as the Pacific Northwest region of North America, extending north to Alaska; it is, however, unknown in Mexico. In Europe, it has been collected from Britain, Germany, Spain, Austria, Belgium, Scandinavia, and Italy; in Asia, it has been reported from India Japan, and Turkey. ''Spathularia flavida'' is considered a protected species in Slovakia. One field guide says of this species, "that one is apt to see [it] while down on the ground looking for something else."

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Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionAscomycota
ClassLeotiomycetes
OrderHelotiales
FamilyCudoniaceae
GenusSpathularia
SpeciesS. flavida