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Omphalotus olivascens

Species of fungus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Omphalotus olivascens
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Omphalotus olivascens, commonly known as the western jack-o'-lantern mushroom,[1] is an orange to brown-colored gilled poisonous mushroom endemic to the North American west coast. It has several lookalikes including Cantharellus cibarius.

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Taxonomy

The fungus was described as new to science in 1976 by American mycologists Howard E. Bigelow, Orson K. Miller Jr., and Harry D. Thiers.[2] A subspecies with blue flesh, O. olivascens var. indigo, was described growing on live oak in Baja California, Mexico.[3]

Description

The cap is 4–18 cm (1.6–7.1 in) wide. The stalks are 4–15 cm (1.6–5.9 in) long and 1–4 cm (0.39–1.57 in) wide. The spores are white to pale yellow.[4]

Similar species

To an untrained eye, O. olivascens appears similar to Cantharellus cibarius,[1] but the jack-o'-lantern mushroom has true, blade-like[5] gills (rather than ridges) and it can have olive coloration that chanterelles lack; also, Omphalotus species are saprotrophic, grow directly on wood, and are bioluminescent.[6]

Several Omphalotus species with similar bioluminescent properties occur worldwide, all of which are presumed poisonous. The best known are the North American jack o'lantern mushroom (O. olearius) and the tsukiyotake (O. japonicus (Kawam.) Kirchm. & O.K. Mill. (formerly known as Lampteromyces japonicus (Kawam.) Sing.), found in Japan and eastern Asia. Molecular analysis shows the jack-o'-lantern to be most closely related to the ghost fungus O. nidiformis,[7] the colours and shades of which most closely resemble O. olivascens.[8] Additionally, O. illudens is similar.[9]

Gymnopilus junonius is another similar-looking species.[4]

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Distribution and habitat

It is endemic to the North American west coast,[1] namely the California Floristic Province.[citation needed]

Ecology

A saprobe or parasite, O. olivascens is usually found on oak or Eucalyptus,[9] rarely on other hosts.

Omphalotus species cause a white rot by breaking down lignin in their tree hosts.[7]

Toxicity

The jack o'lantern mushroom is poisonous; while not lethal, consuming this mushroom leads to very severe cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea.[6]

The toxic ingredient of many species of Omphalotus is a sesquiterpene compound known as illudin S.[10] This, along with illudin M, have been identified in O. nidiformis. The two illudins are common to the genus Omphalotus and not found in any other basidiomycete mushroom.[11]

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See also

References

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