A recent collection of a foam sample from a Yorkshire stream has proved extremely interesting. This is Part One of the tale.
The collection site lies in West Yorkshire above Slaithwaite. It is on the site of a former (19th century) woollen mill, now completely gone. Clough House Mill was owned by Edwin Shaw and Company; I don't know when it was originally built, but it's already on the 1850s 6" to the mile OS survey map.
Here is an early 20th century (exact date unknown) photo of the mill © Kirklees Image Archive:
Here is a map of the site in 1892:
And in 1968 (the tenters have all gone of course, and there is now a sluice controlling the water level in the pond):
By the 1980s all had gone. I haven't looked closely yet, but there is now virtually no evidence left of the mill itself.
Water would of course have been a vital part of the steam required for the mill's functioning. There is a mill pond, approximately 0.37 hectares in size, and an outflow channel which passes over a small stepped man-made "waterfall" immediately above the collection point. The mill pond is surrounded by trees and there is some emergent vegetation; it is fed by two streams both relatively fast flowing. So all in all the site is a potentially good one for Ingoldian fungi, especially when the oxgenation provided by some man-made "waterfalls" is added. The local geology is siliceous Carboniferous "Millstone Grit", so the water will almost certainly be ≤5pH.
Here is the collection site:
Part Two in a day or so . . . .
Cheers
Chris
The Clough House Mill Saga
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The Clough House Mill Saga
Last edited by Chris Yeates on Tue Aug 14, 2018 1:59 am, edited 3 times in total.
"You must know it's right, the spore is on the wind tonight"
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Re: The Clough House Mill Saga
Part Two
A Campylospora parvula. 3 records on FRDBI - I have an additional one from South Yorkshire.
B Classicula fluitans. An interesting species, as it is an anamorphic Basidiomycete - DNA studies place it close to the rust fungi (!) C Culicidospora gravida. The scientific name means "the pregnant mosquito spore". D Lateriramulosa uni-inflata. E Isthmolongispora minima. Originally described by Matsushima from Papua New Guinea. Three previous GB records: one from Laurus litter on Arran, and two from aquatic environments in Rutland.
F This is the Actinosporella anamorph of the aquatic discomycete Miladina lecithina. While the previous species are relatively small, this is a monster - the distance between top left and top right arms is over 100µm - and the arms can grow much longer.
Chris
A Campylospora parvula. 3 records on FRDBI - I have an additional one from South Yorkshire.
B Classicula fluitans. An interesting species, as it is an anamorphic Basidiomycete - DNA studies place it close to the rust fungi (!) C Culicidospora gravida. The scientific name means "the pregnant mosquito spore". D Lateriramulosa uni-inflata. E Isthmolongispora minima. Originally described by Matsushima from Papua New Guinea. Three previous GB records: one from Laurus litter on Arran, and two from aquatic environments in Rutland.
F This is the Actinosporella anamorph of the aquatic discomycete Miladina lecithina. While the previous species are relatively small, this is a monster - the distance between top left and top right arms is over 100µm - and the arms can grow much longer.
Chris
Last edited by Chris Yeates on Tue Aug 14, 2018 1:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
"You must know it's right, the spore is on the wind tonight"
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Re: The Clough House Mill Saga
Quick update before Part Three. I mentioned that the Actinosporella anamorph of the aquatic discomycete Miladina lecithina can get much bigger. Here is a more typical one with longer arms (the distance between the lowest one and the right hand one is almost 350µm.):
Chris
By a happy chance there is, in the same image, a conidium of one of the smallest Ingoldian species, which has proved to be frequent in this sample - Heliscella stellata.Chris
"You must know it's right, the spore is on the wind tonight"
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Re: The Clough House Mill Saga
Part three, again mainly to show the variety of these wonderful fungi (at different scales):
G Tetracladium marchalianum, a characteristic and easily identified species; seldom absent from a foam collection.
H Gyoerffyella rotula, few Yorkshire records, it appears to favour cleaner waters here.
I Ypsilina graminea, relatively frequent in this foam sample, and not uncommon in many others.
J Flabellospora acuminata, one of the larger and striking species, occasional in this collection.
K Tripospermum myrti, smaller than it might appear here, and like other Ingoldian fungi, not always strictly "aquatic".
The final post on this thread will appear shortly, and is arguably the most interesting one.
Chris
H Gyoerffyella rotula, few Yorkshire records, it appears to favour cleaner waters here.
I Ypsilina graminea, relatively frequent in this foam sample, and not uncommon in many others.
J Flabellospora acuminata, one of the larger and striking species, occasional in this collection.
K Tripospermum myrti, smaller than it might appear here, and like other Ingoldian fungi, not always strictly "aquatic".
The final post on this thread will appear shortly, and is arguably the most interesting one.
Chris
"You must know it's right, the spore is on the wind tonight"
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Re: The Clough House Mill Saga
And on to what may be the end of the saga - or perhaps a mere hiatus, as I have only made one collection here, and not at the prime season for Ingoldian fungi.
To date I have identified 45 species, almost all from conidia, and most primarily aquatic ones. There remains a ragbag of "possibles"/ "unidentified" fungi all photographed and filed away for later, this could be between 25-30 more species; I suspected there will be some undescribed ones in there. The ideal with these fungi is to culture them and - ideally - to sequence them in problematical cases. To date I have just been looking at fixed and therefore dead material and so have been very cautious to only put names to those about which I am confident.
One interesting species could well have gone down in the "ragbag", but it was so distinctive that I persevered with it. Reduced to the ultimate mycological standby of "flicking through the pictures", in this case in Seifert et al.'s monumental The Genera of Hyphomycetes: https://www.nhbs.com/the-genera-of-hyphomycetes-book, and concentrating on those listed as aquatic, there it was: Illustrated from the type collection, made in Portugal, in 2001, and formally described in 2003: http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/Sy ... dID=488769
I have been in touch with Prof. Ludmila Marvanová and she says she is unaware of any collection since the 2001 one. I have also chased up several other people who are "in the know" and they say the same. So this appears to be only the second ever collection, 1400 kilometres from the first. Clearly there will be other sites where it occurs and the paucity of workers and difficulty of naming these fungi is an issue. That said there has been a lot of study on these aquatic fungi in recent years and across the globe.
So, new to GB & I . . .
To date I have identified 45 species, almost all from conidia, and most primarily aquatic ones. There remains a ragbag of "possibles"/ "unidentified" fungi all photographed and filed away for later, this could be between 25-30 more species; I suspected there will be some undescribed ones in there. The ideal with these fungi is to culture them and - ideally - to sequence them in problematical cases. To date I have just been looking at fixed and therefore dead material and so have been very cautious to only put names to those about which I am confident.
One interesting species could well have gone down in the "ragbag", but it was so distinctive that I persevered with it. Reduced to the ultimate mycological standby of "flicking through the pictures", in this case in Seifert et al.'s monumental The Genera of Hyphomycetes: https://www.nhbs.com/the-genera-of-hyphomycetes-book, and concentrating on those listed as aquatic, there it was: Illustrated from the type collection, made in Portugal, in 2001, and formally described in 2003: http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/Sy ... dID=488769
I have been in touch with Prof. Ludmila Marvanová and she says she is unaware of any collection since the 2001 one. I have also chased up several other people who are "in the know" and they say the same. So this appears to be only the second ever collection, 1400 kilometres from the first. Clearly there will be other sites where it occurs and the paucity of workers and difficulty of naming these fungi is an issue. That said there has been a lot of study on these aquatic fungi in recent years and across the globe.
So, new to GB & I . . .
"You must know it's right, the spore is on the wind tonight"
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Re: The Clough House Mill Saga
Worth resurrecting this thread now Chris has published his paper and it is public domain. Hope you don't mind me linking it, Chris. PM me if you do.
https://ascomycete.org/Journal/Article/art-0283
https://ascomycete.org/Journal/Article/art-0283
Adam Pollard
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