13. Physarum cinereum (Batsch) Pers.
[Plate IX]., Figs. 4, 4 a, 4 b.
- 1786. Lycoperdon cinereum Batsch, Elench. Fung., p. 249, Fig. 169.
- 1801. Physarum griseum Link, Diss., I, p. 27.
- 1805. Physarum cinereum Persoon, Synopsis, p. 170.
- 1829. Didymium cinereum Batsch, Fries, Syst. Myc., III., p. 126.
- 1829. Physarum plumbeum Fries, Syst. Myc., III., p. 142.
- 1875. Physarum cinereum Batsch, Rost., Mon., p. 102, in part.
- 1896. Physarum plumbeum Fr., Morgan, Myx. Mi. Val., p. 98.
- 1899. Physarum plumbeum Fr., Macbr., N. A. S., p. 35.
- 1909. Physarum cinereum (Batsch) Pers., Torrend, Flore des Myx., p. 183.
Plasmodium watery white, or transparent, wide streaming on decaying sod, etc. Sporangia sessile, closely gregarious, or even heaped, sub-globose, elongate or plasmodiocarpous, more or less calcareous, gray; peridium simple, thin, more or less densely coated with lime; capillitium strongly developed, the nodes more or less richly calcareous, the lime-knots rounded, angular; spore-mass brown, spores clear violaceous-brown, 6–7 µ, distinctly warted.
This delicate, inconspicuous species is well defined by the characters given. It occurs not rarely on richly manured ground, in meadows, lawns, or even on the open prairie. The plasmodium may form rings several inches in diameter, scattered here and there over a surface several square feet in extent, in fruit ascending the blades of grass, completely covering these with the crowded sporangia. The color of the fruit is well described in the specific name; gray or ashen gray. The spores are very distinctly papillate; in some specimens, however, almost smooth; in few instances, rough.
Common. New England west to the Black Hills and Pacific coast. Cosmopolitan.
The present species well illustrates the difficulty confronting the author of to-day who, discussing a group of microscopic organisms, would fain use the nomenclature of his predecessors, honored, but equipped with insufficient lenses. Here is a species reported common in Europe, observed by every mycologist there, from Micheli down, and yet awaiting adequate description until Rostafinski in his great book, gives the results of microscopic analysis. We are now really dealing with P. cinereum Rost; P. cinereum Batsch is a compliment to certain rather clever water-color drawings.
Rostafinski gives a long list of synonyms, none, it is believed, represent American forms; and without taking careful thought, surely no one would rudely disturb such honorable interment; but, in his description the range of spore-measurement, 7–13.3 µ, gives us pause, and raises the suspicion that possibly, in one case or another, the sepulture were perhaps premature. The range is too great! Perhaps, in the series offered in confirmation, small-spored forms represent one species, large-spored, something else?
European students may decide this at their leisure. But Rostafinski having, not without much labor, practically completed his review of the physaroid forms had almost finished the last genus Badhamia, when his mind perhaps returned, no doubt with some lingering misgivings, to the thirteenth species in his physarum list. There were there, he recalled, some large-spored specimens which had rather badhamioid capillitium. The sessile physarums of Fries were also before him, those especially, "floccis albis." Of these one shall be B. panicea, one B. lilacina and one B. verna, described as having rather delicate colorless capillitial tubes combined in a loose net, the calcareous deposits about the enlarged intersections scanty, the spores 12.5 µ.
The description of the fructification as a whole is a condensed statement of that which describes P. vernum, and all taken together indicates some physarum. See now No. 3 preceding, p. 51.