Hebeloma.org - Demystifying *Hebeloma*

• I recently collected several basidiomes that I determined are from genus Hebeloma, but upon further reading I realised that this is a large and rather complex genus.
• Species and even section determination usually requires microscopic examination of spores and cystidia, and there are some difficult and variable species that are not currently resolved by ITS.
• Estimates of around 150 species, in 17 sections, a few with subsections too. Associated with a wide range of trees and shrubs, could be restricted for some species but data is often missing historically or less reliable.
• Worldwide distribution, found in many woodlands, especially in arctic and alpine regions, also common in boreal and temperate regions, and rare in tropical regions.
• Originally described as Agaricus tribus Hebeloma by Fries in 1821 and elevated to genus by Kummer in 1871.
• Typified by Hebeloma mesophaeum since 2013, apparently there was too much controversy around the original type, Hebeloma fastibile (Agaricus fastibilis), based on the original 1801 description of Persoon.
• Currently placed in the family Hymenogastraceae.
• The Latin name translates to ‘Fringe of Youth’, relating to the cortina-like veil found on immature basidiomes of many species in the genus.
• Generally reported as inedible and some as poisonous, common names include ‘Poison Pies’ and ‘Dull Caps’.
• I found the website hebeloma.org, which is an incredible resource, summarising many years of research on the genus, designating types, and describing sections and species.
• All the species descriptions are very detailed, and dynamically parameterised by a database of collections, which contains over 10,000 observations across 120 species. Almost all observations have an associated ITS sequence and many have sequences for other loci too.
• Culmination of decades of work on Hebeloma by H. J. Beker, U. Eberhardt and J. Vesterholt in Europe (2016) and more recently North America.
• Morphology page that explains how to measure, describe, and record morphology (macro and micro) of collections.
• Observations are stored in a dedicated biological database, which also back-ends the website, this allows queries to find certain types of observations and patterns, or to compare the characteristics of a new observation.
• I really like the comprehensive and systematic approach to studying the genus, and the use of morphology, geography, and phylogeny to describe and delimit the sections and species.
• Important features identified for determination of sections and species:
o Geographic location.
o Number of complete lamellae.
o Spore ornamentation, size, and perispore loosening.
o Cheilocystidia shape, length, apical width, and ratios.
• An automatic identifier has been trained on some of the data using machine learning and is available on the website. If some of these features are entered into a form, then suggestions of sections and species with different certainties are generated from the database.
• In testing, the auto-identifier was found to be over 75% accurate for giving the correct species (as determined by expert and molecular analysis) as the top suggestion, and over 95% accurate for giving the correct species in the top 5 suggestions.

www.hebeloma.org

H. J. Beker, U. Eberhardt and J. Vesterholt (2016). Hebeloma (Fr.) P. Kumm., Fungi Europaei vol. 14. Canduso Edizioni.

Posted on November 23, 2023 11:09 PM by shelbourne shelbourne

Observations

Photos / Sounds

What

Poisonpies (Genus Hebeloma)

Observer

shelbourne

Date

October 26, 2023 04:43 PM BST

Photos / Sounds

What

Poisonpies (Genus Hebeloma)

Observer

shelbourne

Date

October 29, 2023 12:45 PM GMT

Description

Looks broadly similar to H. crustuliniforme.

Photos / Sounds

What

Poisonpies (Genus Hebeloma)

Observer

shelbourne

Date

October 29, 2023 01:22 PM GMT

Description

Quite challenging. The white margin looks similar to H. mesophaeum.

Photos / Sounds

Observer

shelbourne

Date

November 11, 2023 04:16 PM GMT

Description

In mixed deciduous woodland, predominantly Betula pendula and Quercus robur. Odour raphanoid; pileus conical to campanulate going broadly convex almost plane with margin up-turned, two-toned and quite variable colouring, disc saturated with brown, whitish band at margin sometimes with a brown ring before, mildly hydrophanous drying more ochraceous, viscid when wet, over-hanging with velar remnants at edge, thin-fleshed; gills clay colour, faint whitish edge, narrowly emarginate, quite crowded, lots of short gills with varying lengths; stipe wide and broadly cylindrical, fibrillose, hollow, whitish, sometimes with cortina-like remnants that are coloured by spores; spore deposit yellowish-brown.

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