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''Mycenastrum'' is a fungal genus in the family Agaricaceae. The genus is monotypic, containing one widely distributed species, ''Mycenastrum corium'', known by various common names: the giant pasture puffball, leathery puffball, or tough puffball. The roughly spherical to turnip-shaped puffball-like fruit bodies grow to a diameter of . Initially covered by a thick, felted, whitish layer, the puffballs develop a characteristic checkered skin (peridium) in age. When the internal spore mass, the gleba, is firm and white, the puffball is edible, although some individuals may suffer mild gastrointestinal symptoms after eating it. As the spores mature, the gleba turns first yellowish then purplish brown. Spores are released when the peridium eventually splits open into irregularly shaped sections. Microscopically, the gleba consists of spherical, dark brown spores with rounded bumps on their surfaces, and a capillitium—intricately branched fibers that form long thorn-like spines. The puffball grows on or in the ground in prairie or desert habitats. Although widely distributed, it is not commonly encountered. ''Mycenastrum corium'' is a threatened species in Europe. ==Taxonomy== The species was originally described in 1805 as ''Lycoperdon corium'' in the second volume of Augustin Pyramus de Candolle and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck's ''Flore Française''. They attributed authorship to French botanist Louis Ben Guersent, who discovered it in an alfalfa field between the town of La Sotte and Rouen in northern France.〔 Synonyms include ''Scleroderma corium'' published by Arthur Harmount Graves in 1830,〔 and ''Steerbekia corium'' published by Elias Magnus Fries in 1849.〔 The species was given its current name by Nicaise Auguste Desvaux in 1842, who circumscribed the genus ''Mycenastrum'' to contain it.〔 Generic synonyms are Vassiliĭ Matveievitch Czernajew's 1845 ''Endonevrum'' and Stephan Schulzer von Müggenburg's 1876 ''Pachyderma''.〔 In 1948, Sanford Myron Zeller circumscribed the new family Mycenastraceae, containing both ''Mycenastrum'' as the type genus, and ''Bovista''.〔 A 2001 molecular study supported the inclusion of ''Mycenastrum corium'' in the Lycoperdales, where it was traditionally placed.〔 In a more recent (2008) cladistic analysis, ''Mycenastrum'' was shown to be a sister group to the Lycoperdaceae; authors Larsson and Jeppson agreed with Zeller (1949) and Pilat's (1958) decision to regard ''Mycenastrium'' as a monotypic genus in the separate family Mycenastraceae.〔 Despite this, several taxonomic authorities prefer to fold Mycenastraceae into the Agaricaceae.〔〔 It is commonly known as the "leathery puffball",〔 the "tough puffball",〔 or the "giant pasture puffball".〔 María Homrich & Jorge E. Wright published the variety ''Mycenastrum corium'' var. ''diabolicum'' in 1973 from South America.〔 ''M. corium'' subspecies ''ferrugineum'' was described in 2005 from Jefferson County, Colorado, by Orson K. Miller.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mycenastrum」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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