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Astraeus odoratus

Astraeus odoratus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Boletales
Family: Diplocystaceae
Genus: Astraeus
Species: A. odoratus
Binomial name
Astraeus odoratus
Phosri, Watling, M.P.Martín & Whalley (2004)
Synonyms

Astraeus thailandicus Petcharat (2003)

Astraeus odoratus
Mycological characteristics
glebal hymenium
no distinct cap
spore print is brown
ecology is mycorrhizal
edibility: inedible

Astraeus thailandicus Petcharat (2003)

Astraeus odoratus (Thai: เห็ดเผาะหนัง; Het pho nang, Het pho, or Het nang, the latter meaning "skin mushroom") is a species of false earthstar in the family Diplocystaceae. Described as a new species in 2004, it was originally found in the Thai highlands growing in sandy or laterite-rich soil in dry lowland dipterocarp forests. The species is found in Southeast Asia.

Fruit bodies begin as brownish spheres or flattened spheres, partially submerged in the earth. The outer tissue layer, the exoperidium, splits open in a star-like fashion into 3–9 rays. The rays are hygroscopic, spreading out when moist and curling inward when dry. The fully expanded fruit body measures up to 65 millimetres (2.6 in) in diameter. Fresh fruit bodies have an odor similar to moist soil.

The spores are spherical, covered with spines, and measure 7.5–15.2 µm. The ornamentation of the spines on the surface is less dense than that of the similar Astraeus hygrometricus.

Astraeus odoratus it is found in the dry lowland dipterocarp forests of Thailand. The fungus fruits during the rainy season in May and June, in sandy or laterite-rich soil. It is associated with Alder, Chestnut, Eucalyptus and Douglas-fir.

In Thailand, it is commonly believed that forest fires stimulate the growth of mushrooms, including A. odoratus, and fires are set intentionally to increase the yield of fruit bodies. Although the mushrooms may be easier to find and collect on the litter-free ground of burnt forest, there is no evidence that burning increases yield, while it does decrease the biodiversity and yield of other edible mushroom-producing fungi.


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