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parasitic "caterpillar" fungus

(elapho)- cordyceps ophioglossoides

Description:

Cordyceps is a genus of ascomycete fungi (sac fungi) that includes about 400 described species. All Cordyceps species are endoparasitoids, mainly on insects and other arthropods (they are thus entomopathogenic fungi); a few are parasitic on other fungi. The best known species of the genus is Cordyceps sinensis, first recorded as yartsa gunbu in Tibet in the 15th Century. It is known as yarsha gumba in Nepal. The Latin etymology describes cord as club, ceps as head, and sinensis as Chinese. Cordyceps sinensis, known in English commonly as caterpillar fungus, is considered a medicinal mushroom in oriental medicines, such as Traditional Chinese medicines and Traditional Tibetan medicine

Habitat:

The genus has a worldwide distribution and most of the approximately 400 species have been described from Asia (notably Nepal, China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam and Thailand). Cordyceps species are particularly abundant and diverse in humid temperate and tropical forests. --The genus has many anamorphs (asexual states), of which Beauveria (possibly including Beauveria bassiana, Metarhizium, and Isaria) are the better known, since these have been used in biological control of insect pests. --Some Cordyceps species are sources of biochemicals with interesting biological and pharmacological properties, like cordycepin; the anamorph of Cordyceps subsessilis (Tolypocladium inflatum) was the source of ciclosporin—a drug helpful in human organ transplants, as it suppresses the immune system (Immunosuppressive drug)

Notes:

Some Cordyceps species are able to affect the behavior of their insect host: Cordyceps unilateralis causes ants to climb a plant and attach there before they die. This ensures the parasite's environment is at an optimal temperature and humidity and maximal distribution of the spores from the fruiting body that sprouts out of the dead insect is achieved. Marks have been found on fossilised leaves which suggest this ability to modify the host's behaviour evolved more than 48 million years ago ---When a Cordyceps fungus attacks a host, the mycelium invades and eventually replaces the host tissue, while the elongated fruiting body (ascocarp) may be cylindrical, branched, or of complex shape. The ascocarp bears many small, flask-shaped perithecia contain the asci. These in turn contain the thread-like ascospores, which usually break into fragments and are presumably infective ---Ma Junren, the coach of a group of female Chinese athletes who broke five world records in distance running in 1993 at the National Games in Beijing, China, told reporters that the runners were taking Cordyceps at his request. The number of new world records being set at a single track event caused much attention and suspicion of drug use, and the records are still widely regarded as dubious, as the athletes failed to match these performances outside of China at independently drug tested events ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordyceps_o... )

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6 Comments

AlexKonig
AlexKonig 12 years ago

i know they look like earth tongue (almost exactly like them, until you see, the part lying under the surface), that was also my first thought, but i excravate the truffle beneath them. Earth tongue arent connect to a other underground-fungus (or ?). These were connect, with yellow roots, to an fungus (elaphomyces - deer truffle). i still have them both here in my collection (dried but complet). take a look at this ( http://www.google.nl/search?hl=nl&cp... )

AlexKonig
AlexKonig 12 years ago

why, your are surely the one with more expierence. Did i confuse something with this id or had you written to fast (happens to me often !!). I'm open for every opinion (as already said). :)

AlexKonig
AlexKonig 12 years ago

hi clive,i will believe you instantly and go on research, by some spottings i'm not completly sure about the id,But this one, i'm pretty sure about the species as much as it gets without microscope-analysis.
The Earth tongue was also a option, but my spot was yellow at the part which stuck in the ground, it had some yellow roots (picture 5) which were attched to a truffle (picture 2+6) underground. It was definitly parasitiar on a Elaphomyces. Here are the other parts of this spotting ( http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/765... ), ( http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/763... ). but definitly, thanks for your opinion,like to hear it more often on my other spottings ( there are surely enough to correct)

KristalWatrous
KristalWatrous 12 years ago

Wow, very neat! Thanks for sharing all that info, Alex. If you get the chance, could you take a look at my spotting of a (maybe?) similar fungus: http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/761.... Thanks!

AlexKonig
AlexKonig 12 years ago

thanks for your warm words. here ( http://www.google.nl/search?hl=nl&su... ) is another little treat and i have correct the id, because of the taxa's i had it a little miss. Now it is (elapho-cordyceps) and i had first seen this under the name cordyceps on an elaphomyces . (elapho - latin - deer)

craigwilliams
craigwilliams 12 years ago

Thanks so much Alex! I have a wonderful book on fungi of Japan which has some astonishing photos of entomopathogenic fungi with their arthropod host attached, but because the text is all in Japanese (and my wife is only rarely keen to translate this sort of thing) I never knew the true extent of their wonder! Incredible and inspiring.

AlexKonig
Spotted by
AlexKonig

Horst, Limburg, Netherlands

Spotted on Oct 23, 2011
Submitted on Oct 25, 2011

Spotted for Mission

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