vs Straw Club
Clavaria pullei compared with Clavaria straminea
Key Differences
- is Vulnerable while Straw Club is Not Evaluated.
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | Straw Club | |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom same | Fungi (균계) | Fungi (균계) |
| Phylum same | Basidiomycota (담자균류) | Basidiomycota (담자균류) |
| Class same | Agaricomycetes (주름버섯강) | Agaricomycetes (주름버섯강) |
| Order same | Agaricales (주름버섯목) | Agaricales (주름버섯목) |
| Family same | Clavariaceae | Clavariaceae |
| Genus same | Clavaria | Clavaria |
| Species | Clavaria pullei | Clavaria straminea |
Evolutionary Relationship
and Straw Club share a common ancestor at the Genus level: Clavaria.
Conservation Status
Straw Club
NE — Not EvaluatedPhysical Characteristics
| Attribute | Straw Club | |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | — | — |
| Average Lifespan | — | — |
| Average Length | — | — |
| Average Weight | — | — |
Habitat & Geographic Range
Typically found in forest floors, decomposing wood, and soil ecosystems.
Distributed across Norway and Sweden. Currently classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.
Straw Club
Typically found in forest floors, decomposing wood, and soil ecosystems.
Distributed across Belgium and Norway.
Clavaria pullei is a coral fungus in the family Clavariaceae with a tropical distribution, described from specimens collected in South America and named for August Adriaan Pulle, a Dutch botanist who contributed extensively to knowledge of Surinamese flora. The genus Clavaria in the broad sense includes a diverse array of simple-clavate to sparingly branched fruiting bodies that occur across tropical, subtropical, and temperate forest soils and grasslands worldwide. Tropical Clavaria species are less well studied than their temperate counterparts, and the taxonomy of the group in South America remains incompletely resolved. Clavaria pullei likely occupies a saprotrophic niche in humid forest ecosystems, decomposing leaf litter and organic debris on the forest floor. Fruiting bodies are typically small, slender, and whitish to pale buff, though precise morphological details depend on the type specimen. The species reflects broader patterns of fungal diversity in neotropical forests, where the majority of fungal biodiversity remains undescribed or poorly documented. Conservation status has not been formally evaluated, and little is known about the ecology, population size, or current distribution of this species beyond the original type description.
Straw Club
No description available.
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