Neolentinus ponderosus
Neolentinus ponderosus, commonly known as the giant sawgill, or ponderous lentinus, is a species of fungus in the family Gloeophyllaceae. It was originally described in 1965 as a species of Lentinus by American mycologist Orson K. Miller. It is found in western North America.
Taxonomy
The fungus was first described as Lentinellus montanus by Orson K. Miller, based on collections that he made in Idaho. In 1985 it was transferred to Neolentinus, a segregate genus created for Lentinus-type fungi that cause a brown rot in wood. The specific epithet ponderosa derives from the Latin word for "heavy".Description
The fruit bodies have convex to flattened caps ranging from in diameter. The caps have small cinnamon-brown scales on the surface and a margin that is usually curved inward initially. The narrow gills are adnate to decurrent and closely spaced, with intervening lamellulae that extend about two-thirds of the distance to the stipe. The gill edges are serrated. The gills are initially whitish before aging to light buff to light orange. The stipe is long and thick. Its reddish-brown surface is made of small scales that are less dense in the upper half, where it has a more whitish or buff color.The fruit bodies produce a white to buff spore print. Microscopically, the spores are somewhat spindle-shaped when viewed from the side, and elliptical viewed from the front; they measure 8–10.5 by 3–5.5 μm and are inamyloid. The basidia are thin-walled,club-shaped and four-spored, measuring 26–36 by 5–8.8 μm. The cystidia on both the faces and edges of the gills are thin-walled, hyaline, narrowly club-shaped, and measure 26–36 by 5–8.8 μm. The cap cuticle comprises threadlike hyphae with a diameter of 4.4–8 μm, while the cap flesh is made of interwoven hyphae measuring 2.5–6 μm. Clamp connections are present in the hyphae.