Abstract

Acta Botanica NeerlandicaVolume 10, Issue 1 p. 56-66 NOTES ON MYXOMYCETES IV MYXOMYCETES COLLECTED IN THE NETHERLANDS, CHIEFLY IN THE VICINITY OF DOORWERTH (GELDERLAND) N. E. NANNENGA-BREMEKAMP, N. E. NANNENGA-BREMEKAMP DoorwerthSearch for more papers by this author N. E. NANNENGA-BREMEKAMP, N. E. NANNENGA-BREMEKAMP DoorwerthSearch for more papers by this author First published: April 1961 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1438-8677.1961.tb00037.xCitations: 2AboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text accessShare full-text accessPlease review our Terms and Conditions of Use and check box below to share full-text version of article.I have read and accept the Wiley Online Library Terms and Conditions of UseShareable LinkUse the link below to share a full-text version of this article with your friends and colleagues. Learn more.Copy URL Share a linkShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditWechat Citing Literature Volume10, Issue1April 1961Pages 56-66 RelatedInformation

Highlights

  • This is the first of a series of short papers dealing with Myxomycetes collected by me since August 1951 in the Netherlands, mostly in an area not exceeding 6 square kilometers in extent, situated round Doorwerth in the province of Gelderland, and extending from Heelsum in the West to Oosterbeek in the East, and from Wolfheze in the North to the banks of the Rhine in the South

  • The list of Dr Karstens, which covers the whole of the Netherlands, contains 18 species that were not found by me

  • This minute species resembles E. minutum De Bary in general aspect, especially in the structure and in the shape of the stipe, but it is only about one third as high

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Summary

Greek specimens of

Transparent, almost always with yellow crystalline corpuscles, either orange throughout or in the lower part only, the upper part being colourless; inclusions of lime, when present, confined to the upper part; dehiscence (Fig. 3, c) circumscissile, leaving, as in Craterium leucocephalum, a cup with a more or less uneven edge. Capillitium (Fig. 3, d) dense, consisting of a large number of slender white filaments with small white, or sometimes yellowish or light orange, calcareous nodes (Fig. 3, e); when the specimens contain but little lime, the latter is confined to the peseudo-columella, and the nodes are expanded and flat and show, as a rule, a pale yellowish tint; the yellow crystalline corpuscles that are found in the peridium, occur in the nodes on the filaments; in the centre of the sporangium the nodes are fused into a bright orange pseudocolumella with unequal surface. The plasmodium, seen in a number of cases, was yellow

Echinostelium De Bary
The spores all measure
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