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  • Документ
    Lepidoderma chailletii
    (CABI, 2010) Krivomaz, T. I.; Michaud, A.; Minter, D. W.
    Diagnostic features. The clearly defined lime scales on the sporocarp surface are characteristic of the genus Lepidoderma. This species, which is facultatively nivicolous, produces sessile sporocarps often so closely clustered as to have the appearance of plasmodiocarps, the clusters sometimes forming convoluted or almost serpentine structures on the substratum surface.
  • Документ
    Lepidoderma carestianum
    (СABI, 2010) Krivomaz, T. I.; Michaud, A.; Minter, D. W.
    Diagnostic features. A nivicolous species with a flattish continuous plasmodiocarp covered with tiny lime scales.
  • Документ
    Lamproderma ovoideum
    (CABI, 2010) Krivomaz, T. I.; Michaud, A.; Minter, D. W.
    Diagnostic features. Nivicolous species of Lamproderma have dark, often blackish, metallic, iridescent, shiny, separate, globose or nearly globose and stipitate to sessile sporocarps. Lamproderma ovoideum, perhaps the most common nivicolous member of this genus, has ovoid sporocarps and may be distinguished by spore size and ornamentation from other nivicolous species of Lamproderma with similar sporocarps.
  • Документ
    Lamproderma echinosporum
    (CABI, 2010) Krivomaz, T. I.; Michaud, A.; Minter, D. W.
    Diagnostic features. Nivicolous species of Lamproderma have dark, often blackish, metallic, iridescent, shiny, separate, globose or nearly globose and stipitate to sessile sporocarps. Sporocarps of Lamproderma echinosporum are sessile or substipitate and on a narrow base. It may be distinguished from other similar nivicolous species of Lamproderma by its spore ornamentation, with large irregularly distributed spines.
  • Документ
    Diderma alpinum
    (CABI, 2010) Krivomaz, T. I.; Michaud, A.; Minter, D. W.
    Diagnostic features. The genus Diderma can usually be distinguished in the field by the matt calcareous or egg-shell-like character of the peridium. The nivicolous members of this genus are easily confused, but Diderma alpinum can sometimes be distinguished by the combination of an obvious and continuous hypothallus uniting all sporocarps, a smooth peridium, a light-coloured delicate capillitium with dark spindle-shaped bodies, and spores 11–13 µm diam.