Species authority
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Distribution
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Dimensions (mm tall × mm wide)
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Characteristics
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Spore size (μm) shape
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Etymology
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C. africanus[1] H.J. Brodie (1967)
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Mount Kilimanjaro (Tanzania)
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4–6 × 6–8
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experidium not plicate, woolly, hairs of equal length knotted into tight curls; endoperidium smooth with faint or irregular ridges; peridioles 2–2.5 mm in diameter, silvery with tunica
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6.5–8.5 × 8.5–12 ovoid, with a distinct apiculus
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L. African
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C. amazonicus[2] Trierveiler-pereira & Baseia (2009)
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Brazil
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9–11 × 5–7
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experidium finely plicate, woolly, hairs yellowish brown; endoperidium distinctly plicate; peridioles 2–3 × 1.2–2 mm, dark gray and shiny
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14–19 × 12–16 subglobose
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L. Amazon
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C. annulatus[3] H.J. Brodie (1970)
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Cypress Hills (Canada)
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7–10 × 7–12[4]
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pale brown, covered on exoperidium with tomentum; basal emplacement small and inconspicuous; endoperidium pale buff, shiny, lightly striate; lip of peridium with deep brown ring 0.5 mm wide; peridioles 1.5–1.75 mm, roughly triangular with shiny tunica[4]
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15.5–17 × 15–19[4] ellipsoid to ovate or roughly spherical
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C. badius Kobayasi (1937)
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Japan
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8–10 × 6–8
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Exoperidium dark brown, fruiting bodies arising from wooly base 3–mm in diameter; peridioles lenticular, 2.3 mm long by 2 mm wide by 0.6–0.9 mm thick, silvery-lead colored, with tunica.[5]
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15–18 × 11–13[5]
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L. badius (dull brown)
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C. berkeleyanus (Tul. & C. Tul.) Lloyd (1906)
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Widespread distribution in the tropics: West Indies, Florida, Mexico, Bolivia, Brazil, Hawaiian Islands
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6–8 × 4–6[6]
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Exoperidium hairy in fresh specimens, but wears off in age, leaving surface smooth and plicate; inner surface variably plicate; peridioles dark brown, 1.5–3 mm in diameter; typically elliptical, with a thin tunica.[6]
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6–9 × 4–7[6]
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C. bulleri[7] H.J. Brodie (1967)
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West Indies, Hawaiian Islands, Mexico[4]
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5–9 × 5–8[4]
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Exoperidium with fine tomentum and long, converging downward-pointing hairs, plicate in upper third; ectoperidal surface plicate, silvery; epiphragm white with vertical tufts of hyphae; peridioles 2–2.5 mm in diameter with thick tunica, silvery when fresh, dark-brown when old.[8]
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5–8.5 spherical[8]
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C. canna[9] Lloyd (1906)
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Tropical locales: Jamaica, Costa Rica, Barbados, Mexico, Mauritius
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7–8 × 6–8[8]
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Exoperidium dark brown, scabrous with short tomentum; endoperidial surface smooth, white; peridioles with thin tunica on upper side.[8]
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7–9 [8] roughly spherical
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L. from Gr. canna (a reed)
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C. chevalieri Har. & Pat. (1909)
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Oubangui
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Up to 20 × 5–7[10]
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Resembles C. striatus
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8 × 5 ovoid[10]
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C. colensoi Berk. (1855)
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New Zealand, Australia
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6–7 × 5–6[11]
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Cups bell-shaped, smooth with fine hairs pressed down on exoperidium; peridioles approximately 2 mm
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Some ellipsoid, 10–12 × 8–10; some subglobose, 9–12[11]
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W. Colenso
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C. confusus[12] Tai & Hung (1948)
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Yunnan (China)
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11–17 × 5–9[5]
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Exterior surface light cinnamon colored, shaggy; interior surface light buff, smooth; tunica thick.
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7–10 × 5–6.4[5] elliptic or narrowly obovate[5]
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L. confusus (confused)
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C. cornucopiodes[13] T.X. Zhou & W. Ren (1992)
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China
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C. costatus Lloyd (1936)
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Puerto Rico
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2.5–3 mm diameter[14]
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Exoperidium covered with dark, strigose hairs, ribbed, plicate; peridioles small (1 mm), black.[14]
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16–× 5–[14] elliptical
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L. costatus (ribbed)
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C. crassimurus[15] H.J. Brodie (1971)
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Hawaii
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5 × 6–7
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Golden colored, plicate, external hairs; radially wrinkled dark brown peridioles. Has a two-layered cortex and long narrow spores.[16]
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17–20 × 11–12 ellipsoid, very thick-walled (2.5–4 μm)[17]
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L. crassus (thick) murus (wall)
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C. crispus H.J. Brodie (1974)[18]
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Ghana
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Golden-colored, plicate peridia covered on external surface with curls of hyphal hairs
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C. earlei Lloyd (1906)
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Tropical or subtropical: Cuba, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Hawaii
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6–7 × 8[11]
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Dark brown exterior, silvery (almost white) interior surface; tomentum of short hairs; peridioles up to 2 mm wide, thin tunica on upper side[19]
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12 × 10 to 22 × 12[20]
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F.S. Earle
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C. ellipsoideus H.J. Brodie (1974)[21]
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Mysore India
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Pale colored and plicate; has peridioles and spores with an ellipsoidal outline.[16]
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C. elmeri Bres.
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Philippines
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7–10 × 7–9[17]
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Peridioles ash-grey, powdery, 1.3–1.5 mm in diameter; thin tunica (100–150 μm thick).[17]
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18–22 × 10–12[17] ellipsoidal
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A.D.E. Elmer
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C. fimicola Berk. (1881)
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Puerto Rico, Mexico
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2–3 × 4–5
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Pale, with strigose matted hairs; peridioles small, black, 1.5 mm
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8 × 16[22]
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C. gayanus Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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Chile, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Venezuela
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153 × 5–6
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Narrow, conic, dark brown, inner surface striate, out surface only faintly striate; peridioles black, 3 mm with thick outer wall.
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20–32 roughly spherical[14]
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C. Gay
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C. gracilis[23] H.J. Brodie (1973)
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Luzon (Philippines); Brazil[24]
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4–7 × 8–10
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Peridium slender, obconic, thin-walled (0.2–0.4 mm); outer surface umber- or rust-colored and covered with conical tufts of hairs, not plicate, inner surface same color as outer or lighter; epiphragm pale buff with brown hairs; peridioles 2 mm in diameter, circular.[25]
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20 × 10 ellipsoidal
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L. gracilis (slender)
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C. griseocarpus[26] H.J. Brodie (1984)
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C. helenae H.J. Brodie (1966)
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Alpine and boreal, and dry areas of Idaho; Brazil[24]
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15–19 × 12–14
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C. hirtulus B. Liu & Y.M. Li (1989)
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18–25.5 × 7.5–9
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C. hookeri[27] Berk. (1854)
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India, New Zealand, Yunnan (China)
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up to 14 × 10[28]
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Bell-shaped
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J. Hooker
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C. intermedius (Mont.) Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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West Indies, Florida, Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Philippines
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8–9 × 7–8
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Pale fawn color, when young covered with tomentum organized in nodules; peridioles about 2 mm in diameter, with a thin tunica.
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10–× 16 elliptical[29]
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L. inter (middle) and medius (middle)
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C. jiayuguanensis J. Yu, T.X. Zhou & L.Z. Zhao (2002)
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C. julietae H.J. Brodie (1967)
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Jamaica
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7–8 × 7–8[30]
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Pale brown or yellow, obconic with straight sides, thin-walled; exoperidium not plicate, covered with very fine hairs; inside wall smooth, glossy; narrow basal emplacement; epiphragm pale brown or yellowish; peridioles black, elliptical, wrinkled on upper surface, 1.5–1.75 mm long; thin tunica, single-layered cortex.
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5–9 × 5–7 subglobose to ellipsoid, thin-walled.[30]
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L. from the name Juliet
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C. lanatus (H.J. Brodie) R.L. Zhao (2007)[31]
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C. lijiangensis[32] T.X. Zhou & R.L. Zhao (2004)
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China
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6–9 × 3–6
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Obconic or funnel-shaped, outer surface covered by greyish-white hairs and narrow tufts, plicate externally and internally, lip not setose; peridioles 1.5–2 × 1.5–1.8 mm, depressed, mostly round or ellipsoid.
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15.5–18.5 × 11–15
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C. limbatus Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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British Guiana, West Indies, China, India, Africa, South America, Hawaiian Islands, Pacific Islands
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7–10 × 6–7[14]
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Dark brown color, inner and outer surfaces plicate; peridioles 2 mm wide or more, deep brown to black, shiny. Synonymous with C. cheliensis
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16–22 × 10–12
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L. limbatus (bordered, or fringed)
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C. luxiensis[33] T.X. Zhou, J. Yu & Y. Hui Chen (2003)
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China
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C. microsporus Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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San Domingo, Cuba, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Hawaii, Florida
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5–7 × 6–8[8]
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Obconic, exoperidium no plicate, at times hairy; endoperidium smooth or with faint ridges, but not plicate; peridioles black, about 2 mm[34]
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5–6 × 4[8]
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Gr. mikros (small) and spora (seed)
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C. minimus Pat.
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China
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4–5 × 4[8]
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Exoperidium covered with hairs pressed-down. Interior surface smooth. Peridioles approximately 1 mm, with a thin tunica. Single-layered cortex, 50 μm thick.
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18–20 × 10–12[8]
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L. minimus (smallest)
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C. montagnei Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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Brazil, West Indies, Central America, Venezuela, Congo, Philippines, Thailand
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7–10 × 8[35]
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dark brown, fading with age, outside hirsute, faintly plicate; inside walls widely plicate, silvery-colored Peridioles are black and shiny, with a thin tunica, cortex one-layered but may appear two-layered
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20 × 12 ellipsoid
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for Jean P. Montagne, French mycologist
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C. nigroalbus Lloyd (1906)
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Samoa, Fiji
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C. novae-zeelandiae Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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New Zealand
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C. olivaceobrunneus Tai & Hung (1948)
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Yunnan (China)
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7–8 × 6[36]
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16–19 × 8.6–10 ellipitic, rounded at both ends
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L. oliva (olive) and brunneus (brown)
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C. olla (Batsch) Pers. (1801)
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Common, widespread
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10–15 × 8–10
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Flared outwards towards the mouth; exoperidium grey, fine-textured; endoperidium smooth; peridioles large, up to 3.5 wide, irregularly shaped, with tunica.[37]
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10–14 × 6–8[37]
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L. olla (pot)
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C. pallidus Berk. & M.A. Curtis (1868)
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West Indies, Mexico, South America (Brazil and Peru), United States (Georgia and Florida), Hawaiian Islands
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5–7 × 5–7[30]
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Crucible shaped, pale buff-colored; thin and friable peridium walls; exoperidium covered with long down-ward-bent hairs; peridioles dark grey to black; 2 mm diameter; with a thin tunica.
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7.5–15 × 4–8.5[30] Mostly ellipsoid.
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L. pallidus (pale-colored)
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C. pictus[38] H.J. Brodie (1971)
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Mexico
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8–9 × 5
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Outer surface with fine hairs clumped into small mounds; cinnamon brown when dry, dark brown when moist; the mouth has a distinct red-brown band (0.2–0.3 mm wide) immediately below the rim; inside wall smooth, not plicate, lead-grey; emplacement large (7 mm); peridioles situated deep in cup, black, irregular shape (1.75–2 mm wide × 2–2.5 mm long), with depression on upper side; no tunica.
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26–32 globose
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L. picted (painted)
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C. poeppigii Tul. & C. Tul. (1844)
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Warm countries: West Indies, South America, Hawaiian Islands, Asia, Africa, China, Florida
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6–8 × 6
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Narrowly obconic, felty or shaggy, reddish brown to dark brown, almost black in age; both inner and outer surface deeply fluted or plicate; peridioles black and shiny. Synonymous with C. megasporus
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30–42 × 20–28 elliptical[39]
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Poeppig, the collector
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C. pullus Tai & Hung (1948)[12]
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Yunnan China
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C. pygmaeus Lloyd (1906)
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United States: Washington State, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, California; Santiago (Chile)
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4–4.5 × 3.5–4
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Exoperidium greyish brown, smooth, with appressed hairs; peridioles about 1 mm, with thin tunica.[11] Synonymous with C. gansuensis
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12–14 × 8–9[11]
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L. pygmaeus (dwarf)
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C. renweii[32] T.X. Zhou & R.L. Zhao (2004)
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China
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8–10 × 5–6
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Obconic or cup-shaped; outer surface brownish, with yellowish to pinkish hairs and narrow tufts, strongly plicate; peridioles 2 mm diameter
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21–31 × 10.5–13.5 ellipsoid to elongate-ellipsoid
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C. rudis Pat. (1924)
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New Caledonia, Amboina
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5–10 × 5–8
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Conic; striate on inner surface, with reddish squamules on outer surface; interior surface silvery-white; peridioles black-brown with thin tunica, 1 mm wide[10]
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9–12 × 5 elliptical
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C. setosus H.J. Brodie (1967)
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St Lucia, Trinidad, Guadelope, Jamaica, Mexico, Bolivia
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8–10 × 7–8
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Mouth of cup has stiff, dark setae 0.5–1 mm long; outside surface with fine appressed hairs and some longer tangled hairs; inside surface barely plicate, silvery; basal emplacement narrow (1.5–2 mm wide); epiphragm thin, white to pale buff; peridioles angular, black, shiny, 2.5 or more wide.
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17–24 × 10–14[40]
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L. setosus (bristly or hairy)
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C. sinensis[41] Imazeki (1950)
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Kyushu Islands (Japan)
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5–6 × 2.5–5
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Peridium with obconic shape, woolly exoperidial surface (hairs tufted), cinnamon-brown color; inner surface smooth, lead-white; peridioles grey, 1.3 mm wide, 0.5 mm thick.
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12.5–18.5 × 8.3–10.3 ellipsoid[42]
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L.sinensis (Chinese)
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C. stercoreus (Schwein.) De Toni (1888)
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Worldwide
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L. stercorarius (of dung)
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C. striatus (Huds.) Willd. (1787)
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Widespread in temperate regions; Europe, America, India, Japan, China, Mexico
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18–20 × 8–10
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C. subglobisporus R.L. Zhao, Desjardin & K.D. Hyde (2008)[43]
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Northern Thailand
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Ivory-coloured fruiting bodies covered with shaggy hairs, plications on the inner surface of the peridium and subglobose basidiospores.
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C. triplex Lloyd (1906)
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West Indies, Florida, Venezuela, Hawaii, Philippines, Thailand
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5–6 × 5
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Outer surface smooth, covered with scabrous hairs, inner surface smooth, silvery white; peridioles 2 mm with very thin tunica.
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16–22 × 12–14 ellipsoid[44]
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L. triplex (threefold)
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C. yunnanensis B. Liu & Y.M. Li (1989)
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China
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14.5–22.5 × 10.5–18
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