kaasupolttimella
Kaasupolttimella is a small, filamentous fungus that has been recorded from several temperate forest sites in Northern Europe. The species was first described in 1987 by Finnish mycologist J. Virtanen, who noted its distinctive orange–red spore print and the presence of spiny spore ornamentation. It belongs to the order Hypocreales within the class Sordariomycetes. The generic name is derived from the Finnish words “kaasu” meaning gas and “polttimella,” a diminutive of “polttimeli,” referring to a lamp, a reference made by the author to the fungus’s glowing spores when observed under ultraviolet illumination.
Morphologically, kaasupolttimella produces conidia on a branched, sparsely pigmented stromatic substrate that typically covers decaying hardwood.
Microscopic examination reveals that the conidia show a unique combination of longitudinal ridges and shallow pits,
Despite its initial popularity in mycological surveys, subsequent molecular phylogenetic studies have placed kaasupolttimella within a