Helvella corium
Helvella corium is a species of fungus in the family Helvellaceae of the order Pezizales. This inedible cup-shaped fungus is black, and grows on the ground often near willows in deciduous or mixed forests.
Description
The black fruit body is cup-shaped, covered with either scales or small silk-like surface fibrils, and up to in diameter. The upper margin of the fruit body cup may be rounded with scalloped or lobed edges. The short, slender stipe is black on the upper part, but gray at the base; it is cylindrical and tapering with rounded ribs at its base. The odor and taste are not distinctive.The spores are ellipsoid in shape, and measure 17–21 by 10–12 μm. They are hyaline, and contain a single central oil drop. The spore-bearing cells, the asci, are 225–250 by 12–17 μm.
Similar species
Plectania nannfeldtii is a similar-looking fungus with a black-colored stalked cup, but this species has a longer stipe, up to ; microscopically, it has larger spores.Distribution and habitat
Helvella corium has been collected from Asia, Europe, and North America. It is uncommon despite the scope of its distribution. Fruit bodies grow solitary, scattered, or clustered in groups. It is often found in association with the trees Populus tremuloides or Thuja plicata, or with shrubs from genus Salix, Shepherdia canadensis or shrubs from the genus Dryas. Jordan notes a preference for growing on sandy soils or in dunes.This mushroom appears to have a high tolerance for otherwise inhospitable growing conditions, as it has been found growing on caustic spoil mounds of a alkali factory in Kraków, Poland, as well as on abandoned uranium tailings in Ontario, Canada.