Salmon-Eggs

Trichia decipiens

"Trichia decipiens" is a worldwide widespread slime mould species from the order Trichiida.
Hemitrichia Calyculata or Trichia decipiens?? Hemitrichia Calyculata and Trichia decipiens seem so similar at this stage. I'm not sure which this is.

Habitat: Rotting wood Geotagged,Summer,Trichia decipiens,United States,slime mold

Appearance

The plasmodium is white, becoming pink to red at maturity. The small- to large-group-forming fruiting bodies are shiny olive to yellow-olive or brown, and bear mainly stalked, rarely sessile sporangia. These are conical to peak-shaped and are up to 3 mm high and 0.6 to 0.8 mm wide.

The shiny, membraneous hypothallus is wide, and pale to brown in colour. The cylindrical stem is wrinkled, dark brown at the base and becoming gradually lighter toward the top, and is filled with up to 1 mm-long, spore-like bodies. The solid or membranous peridium is yellow, often transparent om thin areas, thickened and deeper beneath, surviving as an initially shallow calyculus.

The capillitium from the mass is olive to olive-yellow and is composed of non-overgrown, simple or branched, deeply olive-yellow, 5 to 6 µm thick elaters, which stand in relief as three to five overhanging spiral strands and become pointed towards the end. The spore mass is olive-yellow to olive, in transmitted light appearing pallidly olive-yellow, occasionally paler. The spores are 10 to 13 µm in diameter, and have a largely reticulated surface, the remainder being densely warty or prickly.
A Slime Mould, Trichia decipiens This striking slime mould was on the end of a decaying log. The other cut end was facing in another direction receiving more light and was bare. I have to assume that both ends were exposed at the same time. Canada,Fall,Geotagged,Trichia decipiens,slime mold

Habitat

The species has a worldwide distribution. "T. decipiens" slime molds live on the deadwood of conifers and broadleaf trees year-round. The slime mould is associated with, among others, species of the genera "Trichia", "Arcyria" and "Cribraria" as well as "Lycogala epidendrum" and "Stemonitis typhina".

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