Morchella tridentina is a species of fungus in the family Morchellaceae, referred to as the mountain blond or western blond morel in North America, but also found in the Mediterranean basin. It has conical, grey to buff fruit bodies that grow up to 20 cm (7.9 in) tall and 5 cm (2.0 in) wide. Recent molecular and morphological studies have also shown M. tridentina to be conspecific to M. frustrata, M. quercus-ilicis, M. elatoides, M. elatoides var. elegans and M. conica var. pseudoeximia.
Taxonomy
Morchella tridentina was first described by Giacomo Bresadola in 1892 in a work on fungi found in the region of Trento in Italy, and it has retained the same name up to the present day.[3][4] The species name derives from the Latin word for Trento, "Tridentum".[5]
The American species Morchella frustrata was described as new to science in a 2012 publication by Michael Kuo and colleagues. The report resulted from the Morel Data Collection Project,[6] which aimed to clarify aspects of the biology, taxonomy and distribution of North American Morchella, and described 14 new morel species (without, however, checking in detail the correspondence with existing European names[2]). The type locality was in Placer County, California.[7] In a study the year before, this morel was referred to as "Mel-2", which was a phylogenetic species, defined by DNA sequence rather than morphological characteristics.[8] It was given the common name "mountain blond morel".[9] The specific epithet frustrata refers to the "frustrating combination of black and yellow morel features that characterize the species."[7]
In two subsequent studies, however, Richard and colleagues (in 2014) and Loizides and colleagues (in 2015) used DNA analysis to determine that this species is identical to morels collected in southern Europe, matching the original 1892 description of Morchella tridentina by Bresadola. The latter name therefore takes precedence and M. frustrata is actually a synonym of M. tridentina.[1][2]
Description
Morphology
The fruit bodies are often rufescent and 9–20 cm (3.5–7.9 in) high. The conical cap is 4–6 cm (1.6–2.4 in) high and 2.5–4 cm (1.0–1.6 in) wide at the widest point. The cap surface features pits and ridges, which are formed from the intersection of 16–22 primary vertical ridges and few shorter, secondary vertical ridges, with frequent, sunken, horizontal ridges. The cap is attached to the stipe with a distinct sinus about 2–4 mm deep and 2–4 mm wide. The smooth, splitting ridges remain persistently pale throughout the maturity process, easily distinguishing this species from other species in section Elata, or black morels, which have ridges that typically darken with age.[2] Pits are usually elongated vertically. They are smooth, dull grayish to pale yellowish or nearly whitish when young, later becoming pale tan to pale pinkish tan. The stipe is 2–6 cm (0.8–2.4 in) high by 1–4 cm (0.4–1.6 in) wide and is more or less equal in width throughout its length or sometimes thicker at the base. Its whitish surface is smooth or finely mealy with whitish granules. The flesh is whitish and measures 1–2 mm thick in the hollow cap and the sterile inner surface of the cap is whitish and pubescent (having soft, short and erect "hairs").[7]
The ascospores are smooth, elliptical, and measure 20–26 by 13–18 µm. The asci (spore-bearing cells) measure 225–330 by 15–25 µm and are cylindrical, eight-spored, and hyaline (translucent) when mounted in dilute (2%) potassium hydroxide (KOH). The paraphyses are cylindrical to capitate or moniliform, measuring 95–250 long by 10–25 µm wide, and are septate. Their tips are rounded to somewhat club-shaped or infrequently somewhat fuse-shaped. Elements on the sterile ridges are 50–175 by 12.5–20 µm, and septate. The terminal cells are club-shaped or nearly so.[7]
Edibility
See the article on the genus Morchella for details of edible characteristics, which are presumed to be the similar in all morels. In general, morels should not be eaten raw, as they can trigger allergic reactions in susceptible individuals. Their flavor is enhanced after they are fried, stuffed, or dried, and so is their safety for eating.[10][11]
Beware of confusion with Gyromitra species.[11]
Similar species
This species is very similar to Morchella rufobrunnea, another rufescent, cosmopolitan species with pale colours, which is nonetheless found in urban and suburban areas. The latter is distinguished by an adnate cap lacking a sinus and a distinct dark pruinescence on the stem, more pronounced in young fruit bodies.[2] Due to its similar light coloration, M. tridentina may also be confused with Morchella esculentoides; as Kuo states, "it looks like a black morel with the colors of a yellow morel."[12] The vertically arranged pits and ridges, as well as the slight indentation where the cap meets the stem on M. tridentina, however, more closely resemble the black morels such as M. elata.[7] M. snyderi is somewhat similar in appearance to young specimens of M. tridentina, but mature specimens of the former species can be distinguished by the brown to black ridges on the cap, and the ridged and pocketed stipe.[12]
Despite its light color, M. tridentina belongs to the Elata clade along with other black morels, including M. tomentosa and M. angusticeps.[7]
Habitat and distribution
Morchella tridentina fruit bodies can be found in mountainous forests and maquis shrubland, where they grow in the spring. In terms of their distribution, they may grow solitary, scattered, or in small groups. The exact trophic status of the fungus is not yet known with certainty, but it is suspected to be facultatively mycorrhizal or biotrophic. Tree species associated with the fungus include pacific madrone (Arbutus menziesii), oaks (Quercus spp.), Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa), sugar pine (Pinus lambertiana), and white fir (Abies concolor).[7] In Europe it is often found with holm oak (Quercus ilex), strawberry trees (Arbutus andrachne), olive trees (Olea europaea), Spanish fir (Abies pinsapo), Silver fir (Abies alba) and Scot's pine (Pinus sylvestris).
Although it was originally hypothesized that collections of M. tridentina from Turkey might recently have been introduced from North America,[13] numerous collections reported since from remote and undisturbed areas in the Mediterranean and the Alps (including Bresadola's original collection from Trentino), suggest a long-time and well-established presence of this species in Europe.[2][14] Kuo suggests that it might be also widely distributed in western North America, but so far it has only been confirmed to be present in Oregon and California.[12]
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