Morchella: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Genus of fungi}} |
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{{Redirect|Morel}} |
{{Redirect|Morel}} |
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{{Italic title}} |
{{Italic title}} |
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{{Automatic taxobox |
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{{Taxobox |
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| name = Morel |
| name = Morel |
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| image = Morchella conica 1 beentree.jpg |
| image = Morchella conica 1 beentree.jpg |
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| image_caption = A black morel in [[Poland]] |
| image_caption = A black morel in [[Poland]] |
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| taxon = Morchella |
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| image_width = 234px |
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| authority = [[Dill.]] ex [[Christian Hendrik Persoon|Pers.]] : [[Elias Magnus Fries|Fr.]] (1794) |
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| regnum = [[Fungi]] |
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| type_species = ''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' |
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| divisio = [[Ascomycota]] |
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| type_species_authority = ([[Carl Linnaeus|L.]]) Pers. : [[Elias Magnus Fries|Fr.]] (1801) |
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| classis = [[Pezizomycetes]] |
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| subdivision_ranks = [[Species]] |
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| subdivision = ~70 worldwide (see text) |
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| familia = [[Morchellaceae]] |
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| synonyms_ref = <ref name="urlFungorum synonymy: Morchella"/> |
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| genus = '''''Morchella''''' |
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| synonyms = |
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| genus_authority = [[Dilhijnmhority = ([[Cars|L.]]) Pers. : [[Elias Magnus Fries|Fr.]] (1801) |
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* ''Phalloboletus'' <small>[[Adans.]] (1763)</small> |
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| subdivision_ranks = [[Species]] |
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* ''Boletus'' <small>[[Tourn.]] ex Adans. (1763)</small> |
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| subdivision = ~70 worldwide (see text) |
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* ''Eromitra'' <small>[[Lév.]] (1846)</small> |
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| synonyms_ref = <ref name="urlFungorum synonymy: Morchella"/> |
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* ''Mitrophora'' <small>Lév. (1846)</small> |
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| synonyms = |
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*'' |
* ''Morilla'' <small>[[Quél.]] (1886)</small> |
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*'' |
* ''Morchella'' sect. ''Mitrophorae'' <small>(Lév.) [[S.Imai]] (1932)</small> |
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*''Eromitra'' <small>[[Lév.]] (1846)</small> |
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*''Mitrophora'' <small>Lév. (1846)</small> |
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*''Morilla'' <small>[[Quél.]] (1886)</small> |
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*''Morchella'' sect. ''Mitrophorae'' <small>(Lév.) [[S.Imai]] (1932)</small> |
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}} |
}} |
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'''''Morchella''''', the '''true morels''', is a [[genus]] of edible [[ascomycota|sac fungi]] closely related to anatomically simpler [[Cup fungus|cup fungi]] in the order [[Pezizales]] ([[division (mycology)|division]] [[Ascomycota]]). These distinctive [[fungi]] have a [[honeycomb]] appearance due to the network of ridges with pits composing their [[cap (mycology)|caps]]. Morels are prized by [[gourmet]] cooks, particularly in [[Catalan cuisine|Catalan]] and [[French cuisine]], but can be toxic if consumed raw or undercooked. Due to difficulties in [[Fungiculture|cultivation]], commercial harvesting of wild morels has become a multimillion-dollar industry in the temperate [[Northern Hemisphere]], in particular [[North America]], [[Turkey]], [[China]], the [[Himalayas]], [[India]], and [[Pakistan]] where these highly prized fungi are found in abundance. |
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{{nutritional value |
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| name=Morel mushrooms, raw |
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| kJ=129 |
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| protein=3.12 g |
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| fat=0.57 g |
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| carbs=5.1 g |
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| fiber=2.8 g |
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| sugars=0.6 g |
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| calcium_mg=43 |
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| iron_mg=12.18 |
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| magnesium_mg=19 |
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| phosphorus_mg=194 |
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| potassium_mg=411 |
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| zinc_mg=2.03 |
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| manganese_mg=0.587 |
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| thiamin_mg=0.069 |
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| riboflavin_mg=0.205 |
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| niacin_mg=2.252 |
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| pantothenic_mg=0.44 |
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| folate_ug=9 |
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| vitB6_mg=0.136 |
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| vitD_ug=5.1 |
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| source_usda = 1 |
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| note=[http://ndb.nal.usda.gov/ndb/search/list?qlookup=11240&format=Full Link to USDA Database entry] |
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}} |
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'''''Morchella''''', the true '''morels''', is a [[genus]] of edible [[ascomycota|sac fungi]] closely related to anatomically simpler [[Cup fungus|cup fungi]] in the order [[Pezizales]] ([[division (biology)|division]] [[Ascomycota]]). These distinctive [[fungi]] have a [[honeycomb]] appearance, due to the network of ridges with pits composing their [[cap (mycology)|cap]]. Morels are prized by gourmet cooks, particularly in [[French cuisine]]. Due to difficulties in [[Horticulture|cultivation]], commercial harvesting of wild morels has become a multimillion-dollar industry in the temperate [[Northern Hemisphere]], in particular North America, Turkey, China, the Himalayas, India, and Pakistan, where these highly prized fungi are found in abundance. |
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Typified by ''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' in 1794, the genus has been the source of considerable [[taxonomy (biology)|taxonomical]] controversy throughout the years, mostly with regard to the number of species involved, with some [[mycologist]]s recognising as few as three species and others over thirty. Current [[molecular phylogenetics]] suggest there might be over seventy species of ''Morchella'' worldwide, most of them exhibiting high continental [[endemism]] and provincialism. |
Typified by ''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' in 1794, the genus has been the source of considerable [[taxonomy (biology)|taxonomical]] controversy throughout the years, mostly with regard to the number of species involved, with some [[mycologist]]s recognising as few as three species and others over thirty. Current [[molecular phylogenetics]] suggest there might be over seventy species of ''Morchella'' worldwide, most of them exhibiting high continental [[endemism]] and provincialism. |
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The genus is currently the focus of extensive [[phylogenetic]], [[biogeographical]], taxonomical and [[nomenclatural]] studies, and several new species have been described from Australia, Canada, Cyprus, Israel |
The genus is currently the focus of extensive [[phylogenetic]], [[biogeographical]], taxonomical and [[nomenclatural]] studies, and several new species have been described from Australia, Canada, Cyprus, Israel, Spain, and Turkey. |
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== |
== Description == |
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{{Expand section|date=November 2023}} |
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Morels resemble a [[honeycomb]] due to the network of ridges with pits composing their [[Cap (mycology)|caps]]. Morels have a convoluted head/cap, and are varied in shape and habitat.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Cup fungus {{!}} Edible, Spore Dispersal & Saprobes {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/science/cup-fungus |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> <gallery> |
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File:Morchella americana on a mossy riverbank in MI.jpg |
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File:Morchella_americana_closer.JPG |
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File:Morchella esculenta 5.jpg |
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File:Morchella esculenta 6.jpg |
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File:Old holiday shot of Morchella esculenta (GB= Morel mushroom, D= Speise-Morchel, NL= Gewone morielje) - panoramio.jpg |
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File:Morchella esculenta Illinois.jpg |
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</gallery> |
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=== Similar species === |
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''Morchella'' Dill. ex Pers. : Fr. was typified by [[Christiaan Hendrik Persoon]] in 1794,<ref name="Persoon 1794"/> with ''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' designated as the [[type species]] for the genus. Among early pioneers who took an interest in the genus, were mycologists [[Julius Vincenz von Krombholz]] and [[Émile Boudier]], who, in 1834<ref name="Krombholz 1834"/> and 1897<ref name="Boudier 1897"/> respectively, published several species and varieties, accompanied by meticulously illustrated iconographic plates. The seminal taxon ''[[Morchella elata]]'', whose true identity still remains unresolved,<ref name="Richard 2015"/><ref name="Loizides2017"/> was described by [[Elias Magnus Fries|Elias Fries]] in 1822, from a fir forest in [[Sweden]].<ref name="Fries 1822"/> Other classical, early-proposed names include ''[[Morchella deliciosa]]'', also described by Fries in 1822, ''[[Morchella semilibera]]'', the half-free morel, originally described by [[de Candolle]] and sanctioned by Fries in 1822,<ref name="Fries 1822"/> ''[[Morchella vulgaris]]'', which was recombined by [[Samuel Frederick Gray|Samuel Gray]] as a distinct species in 1821<ref name="Gray 1821"/> following a ''forma'' of ''M. esculenta'' previously proposed by [[Christiaan Hendrik Persoon|Persoon]], and ''[[Morchella angusticeps]]'', a large-spored species described by American mycologist [[Charles Horton Peck|Charles Peck]] in 1887.<ref name="Peck 1879"/> ''[[Morchella purpurascens]]'', the purple morel, was first described by [[Emile Boudier|Boudier]] as a variety of ''M. elata'' in 1897 based on a 1834 plate by Krombholz, and was recombined as a distinct species in 1985 by Emile Jacquetant.<ref name=Jacquetant/><ref name="Jacquetant 1985"/> ''[[Morchella eximia]]'', a globally-occurring fire-associated species was also described by [[Emile Boudier|Boudier]] in 1910.<ref name="Boudier 1910"/> The old, widely applied name ''[[Morchella conica]]'',<ref name="Persoon 1818"/> featuring in many field guides and literature across several countries, has been shown by Richard and colleagues to be [[Nomen illegitimum|illegitimate]].<ref name="Richard 2015"/> |
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[[File:Frühjahrslorchel.JPG|thumb|right|upright|''[[Gyromitra esculenta]]'', a [[false morel]]]] |
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When gathering morels for the table, care must be taken to distinguish them from the poisonous "[[false morel]]s", a term loosely applied to describe ''[[Gyromitra esculenta]]'', ''[[Verpa bohemica]]'', and other morel lookalikes. Although false morels are sometimes eaten without ill effect, they can cause severe gastrointestinal upset, loss of muscular coordination (including [[cardiac muscle]]), or even death.<ref name="Michelot 1991" /><ref>Bresinsky A, Besl H. (1990). A colour atlas of poisonous fungi. Wolfe Publishing Ltd, London.</ref> Incidents of [[Mushroom poisoning|poisoning]] usually occur when they are eaten in large quantities, inadequately cooked, or over several days in a row. False morels contain [[gyromitrin]], an organic [[carcinogenic]] poison, hydrolyzed in the body into [[monomethylhydrazine]] (MMH).<ref name="Karlson-Stiber 2003" /> ''Gyromitra esculenta'' in particular, has been reported to be responsible for up to 23% of mushroom fatalities each year in [[Poland]].<ref name="Lampe 1979" /> |
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== Systematic classification == |
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The key morphological features distinguishing false morels from true morels are as follows: |
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=== Phylogeny === |
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* ''[[Gyromitra]]'' species often have a "wrinkled" or "cerebral" (brain-like) appearance to the cap due to multiple wrinkles and folds, rather than the honeycomb appearance of true morels due to ridges and pits. |
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* ''Gyromitra esculenta'' has a cap that is usually reddish-brown in colour, but sometimes also chestnut, purplish-brown, or dark brown. |
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* ''[[Gyromitra]]'' species are typically chambered in longitudinal section, while ''[[Verpa]]'' species contain a cottony substance inside their stem, in contrast to true morels which are always hollow. |
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* The caps of ''[[Verpa]]'' species (''[[Verpa bohemica|V. bohemica]]'', ''[[Verpa conica|V. conica]]'' and others) are attached to the stem only at the apex (top of the cap), unlike true morels which have caps that are attached to the stem at, or near the base of the cap. The easiest way to distinguish ''[[Verpa]]'' species from ''Morchella'' species is to slice them longitudinally.<ref name="Kuo 2007" /><ref name="Kuo 2005" /> |
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== Taxonomy == |
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Early [[phylogenetic]] analyses supported the hypothesis that the genus comprises only a few species with considerable [[phenotype|phenotypic]] variation.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Yoon CS, Gessner RV, Romano MA | year = 1990 | title = Population genetics and systematics of the ''Morchella esculenta'' complex | url = | journal = Mycologia | volume = 82 | issue = 2| pages = 227–235 | doi=10.2307/3759851}}</ref><ref name="Ref_f"/><ref name="Bunyard 1995"/> Subsequent multigenic DNA studies, however, have revealed more than a dozen genealogically distinct species in [[North America]] and at least as many in [[Europe]].<ref name=mdcp/><ref name="O'Donnell 2011"/><ref name="Taşkın 2012"/><ref name="Richard 2015"/> DNA studies revealed three discrete [[clade]]s, or genetic groups, consisting of the "white morels" (''[[Morchella rufobrunnea]]'' and ''[[Morchella anatolica]]''), the "yellow morels" (''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' and others), and the "black morels" (''[[Morchella elata]]'' and others).<ref name="O'Donnell 2011"/> The fire-associated species ''[[Morchella tomentosa]]'', commonly known as the "gray morel", is distinct for its [[tomentose|fine hairs]] on the cap ridges and unique [[sclerotium|sclerotia]]-like underground structures, and may also deserve its own clade based on DNA evidence.<ref name="Stefani 2010"/><ref name="Kuo 2008"/><ref name="McFarlane 2005"/> Within the yellow and black clades, there are dozens of distinct species, most [[endemism|endemic]] to individual continents or regions.<ref name="O'Donnell 2011"/> This species-rich view is supported by studies in [[Western Europe]],<ref name=kell05/> [[Turkey]],<ref name=task10/> [[Cyprus]],<ref name="Loizides 2016"/> [[Israel]],<ref name="Masaphy 2009"/> [[China]],<ref name="Du 2012b"/> [[Patagonia]]<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Pildain MB, Visnovsky SB, Barroetavena C | year = 2014 | title = Phylogenetic diversity of true morels (''Morchella''), the main edible non-timber product from native Patagonian forests of Argentina | url = | journal = Fungal Biology | volume = 118 | issue = | pages = 755–763 | doi=10.1016/j.funbio.2014.03.008}}</ref> and the [[Himalayas]].<ref name="Kanwal 2010"/> |
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The [[sporocarp (fungi)|fruit bodies]] of ''Morchella'' species are highly [[Polymorphism (biology)|polymorphic]], varying in shape, color, and size. While in many cases they do not exhibit clear-cut distinguishing features microscopically, this has historically contributed to uncertainties in taxonomy.<ref name="Kimbrough 1970" /><ref name="Korf 1972" /><ref name="Masaphy 2010" /><ref name="Loizides2017" /> Discriminating between the various taxa described is further hindered by uncertainty over which of these are truly biologically distinct. Remarkably, some authors in the past had suggested that the genus contains as few as 3 to 6 species,<ref name="Overholts 1934" /><ref>Seaver FJ. (1942). The North American cup-fungi (Operculates). Hafner Publishing C. New York. 377 p.</ref><ref>Dennis RWG. (1978). Bristish Ascomycètes. Ed. Cramer, Vaduz, 585 p.</ref><ref>Breitenbach J, Kränzlin F. (1984). Fungi of Switzerland, Volume 1: Ascomycetes. Verlag Mykologia, Luzern, Switzerland. 314 p.</ref><ref name="Ref_c">Weber, N.S. (1988). In A Morel Hunter's Companion, pp. 111-67. Two Peninsula Press: Lansing.</ref> while others recognised as many as 34.<ref name="Boudier 1897" /><ref name="Jacquetant" /><ref name="Clowez 2012" /> Efforts to clarify the situation and re-evaluate old classical names (such as ''[[Morchella elata]]'' and others) in accordance to current phylogenetic data have been challenging, due to vague or ambiguous original descriptions and loss of [[holotype]] material.<ref name="Richard 2015" /><ref name="Loizides 2015" /> In 2012, the simultaneous description of several new taxa from Europe by Clowez<ref name="Clowez 2012" /> and North America by Kuo and colleagues<ref name="Kuo 2012" /> resulted in several [[Synonym (taxonomy)|synonymities]] further complicating matters, until a transatlantic study by Richard and colleagues resolved many of these issues in 2014.<ref name="Richard 2015" /> The genus is currently undergoing extensive re-evaluation with regard to the taxonomic status of several species. |
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=== |
=== Early taxonomic history === |
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''Morchella'' Dill. ex Pers. : Fr. was typified by [[Christiaan Hendrik Persoon]] in 1794,<ref name="Persoon 1794" /> with ''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' designated as the [[type species]] for the genus. Among early pioneers who took an interest in the genus, were mycologists [[Julius Vincenz von Krombholz]] and [[Émile Boudier]], who, in 1834<ref name="Krombholz 1834" /> and 1897<ref name="Boudier 1897" /> respectively, published several species and varieties, accompanied by meticulously illustrated iconographic plates. The seminal taxon ''[[Morchella elata]]'', whose true identity still remains unresolved,<ref name="Richard 2015" /><ref name="Loizides2017" /> was described by [[Elias Magnus Fries|Elias Fries]] in 1822, from a fir forest in [[Sweden]].<ref name="Fries 1822" /> Other classical, early-proposed names include ''[[Morchella deliciosa]]'', also described by Fries in 1822, ''[[Morchella semilibera]]'', the half-free morel, originally described by [[de Candolle]] and sanctioned by Fries in 1822,<ref name="Fries 1822" /> ''[[Morchella vulgaris]]'', which was recombined by [[Samuel Frederick Gray|Samuel Gray]] as a distinct species in 1821<ref name="Gray 1821" /> following a ''forma'' of ''M. esculenta'' previously proposed by [[Christiaan Hendrik Persoon|Persoon]], and ''[[Morchella angusticeps]]'', a large-spored species described by American mycologist [[Charles Horton Peck|Charles Peck]] in 1887.<ref name="Peck 1879" /> ''[[Morchella purpurascens]]'', the purple morel, was first described by [[Emile Boudier|Boudier]] as a variety of ''M. elata'' in 1897 based on an 1834 plate by Krombholz, and was recombined as a distinct species in 1985 by Emile Jacquetant.<ref name="Jacquetant" /><ref name="Jacquetant 1985" /> ''[[Morchella eximia]]'', a globally-occurring fire-associated species was also described by [[Emile Boudier|Boudier]] in 1910.<ref name="Boudier 1910" /> The old, widely applied name ''[[Morchella conica]]'',<ref name="Persoon 1818" /> featuring in many field guides and literature across several countries, has been shown by Richard and colleagues to be [[Nomen illegitimum|illegitimate]].<ref name="Richard 2015" /> |
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=== Classification === |
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The [[sporocarp (fungi)|fruit bodies]] of ''Morchella'' species are highly [[Polymorphism (biology)|polymorphic]], varying in shape, color and size, while in many cases they do not exhibit clear-cut distinguishing features microscopically; this has historically contributed to uncertainties in taxonomy.<ref name="Kimbrough 1970"/><ref name="Korf 1972"/><ref name="Masaphy 2010"/><ref name="Loizides2017"/> Discriminating between the various taxa described, is further hindered by uncertainty over which of these are truly biologically distinct. Remarkably, some authors in the past had suggested that the genus contains as few as 3 to 6 species,<ref name="Overholts 1934"/><ref>Seaver FJ. (1942). The North American cup-fungi (Operculates). Hafner Publishing C. New York. 377 p.</ref><ref>Dennis RWG. (1978). Bristish Ascomycètes. Ed. Cramer, Vaduz, 585 p.</ref><ref>Breitenbach J, Kränzlin F. (1984). Fungi of Switzerland, Volume 1: Ascomycetes. Verlag Mykologia, Luzern, Switzerland. 314 p.</ref><ref name="Ref_c">Weber, N.S. (1988). In A Morel Hunter's Companion, pp. 111-67. Two Peninsula Press: Lansing.</ref> while others recognised as many as 34.<ref name="Boudier 1897"/><ref name=Jacquetant/><ref name="Clowez 2012"/> Efforts to clarify the situation and re-evaluate old classical names (such as ''[[Morchella elata]]'' and others) in accordance to current phylogenetic data, have been challenging, due to vague or ambiguous original descriptions and loss of [[holotype]] material.<ref name="Richard 2015"/><ref name="Loizides 2015"/> In 2012, the simultaneous description of several new taxa from Europe by Clowez<ref name="Clowez 2012"/> and North America by Kuo and colleagues<ref name="Kuo 2012"/> resulted in several [[Synonym (taxonomy)|synonymities]] further complicating matters, until a transatlantic study by Richard and colleagues resolved many of these issues in 2014.<ref name="Richard 2015"/> The genus is currently undergoing extensive re-evaluation with regards to the taxonomic status of several species. |
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About 80 species of ''Morchella'' were described until the turn of the 21st century (per the ''[[Index Fungorum]]''), a number of which were later shown to be illegitimate or synonyms.<ref name="Richard 2015" /> As molecular tools became widely available in the new millennium, a revived interest in the genus commenced and several new species were proposed. In 2008 Kuo described ''[[Morchella tomentosa]]'' from burned coniferous forests in western North America.<ref name="Kuo 2008" /> In 2010 Işiloğlu and colleagues described ''[[Morchella anatolica]]'',<ref name="Işiloğlu 2010" /> a [[Basal (phylogenetics)|basal]] species from [[Turkey]] later shown to be sister to ''[[Morchella rufobrunnea]]''. A study by Clowez described over 20 new species in 2012,<ref name="Clowez 2012" /> while later in the same year, another study by Kuo and colleagues described 19 species from [[North America]].<ref name="Kuo 2012" /> However, several of these newly proposed names later turned out to be synonyms.<ref name="Richard 2015" /> An extensive taxonomical and nomenclatural revision of the genus provided by Richard and colleagues in 2014, applied names to 30 of the genealogical lineages recognized so far and clarified several synonymities.<ref name="Richard 2015" /> Also in 2014, Elliott and colleagues described ''[[Morchella australiana]]'' from [[sclerophyll]] forests in [[Australia]],<ref name="Elliott 2014" /> while Clowez and colleagues described ''[[Morchella fluvialis]]'' from riparian forests in [[Spain]].<ref name="Clowez 2014" /> |
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In 2015, Loizides and colleagues clarified the taxonomy of ''[[Morchella tridentina]]'', a cosmopolitan species described under many names, and recombined ''[[Morchella kakiicolor]]'' as a distinct species.<ref name="Loizides 2015" /> Later in the same year, Clowez and colleagues described ''[[Morchella palazonii]]'' from Spain,<ref>Clowez, Philippe; Bellanger, Jean-Michel; de la Osa, Luis Romero; Moreau, Pierre-Arthur. (2015). Morchella palazonii sp. nov. (Ascomycota, Pezizales) : une nouvelle morille méditerranéenne. Clé des Morchella sect. Morchella en Europe. Documents Mycologiques XXXVI: 71–84.</ref> while Voitk and colleagues described ''[[Morchella laurentiana]]'' from [[Canada]] and ''[[Morchella eohespera]]'', a cosmopolitan species present in several continents.<ref name="Voitk 2016" /> In an extensive phylogenetic and morphological study from [[Cyprus]] in 2016, Loizides and colleagues added two more [[Mediterranean]] species, ''[[Morchella arbutiphila]]'' and ''[[Morchella disparilis]]'', and resurrected ''[[Morchella dunensis]]'' as an autonomous species.<ref name="Loizides 2016" /> In the same year, Taşkın and colleagues described four of the previously unnamed phylospecies from Turkey: ''[[Morchella conifericola]]'', ''[[Morchella feekensis]]'', ''[[Morchella magnispora]]'' and ''[[Morchella mediteterraneensis]]''.<ref name="Taşkın2016" /> |
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===Species=== |
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About 80 species of ''Morchella'' were described until the turn of the century (http://www.indexfungorum.org/), a number of which were later shown to be illegitimate or synonyms.<ref name="Richard 2015"/> As molecular tools became widely available in the new millennium, a revived interest in the genus commenced and several new species were proposed. In 2008 Kuo described ''[[Morchella tomentosa]]'' from burned coniferous forests in western North America.<ref name="Kuo 2008"/> In 2010 Işiloğlu and colleagues described ''[[Morchella anatolica]]'',<ref name="Işiloğlu 2010"/> a [[Basal (phylogenetics)|basal]] species from [[Turkey]] later shown to be sister to ''[[Morchella rufobrunnea]]''. A study by Clowez described over 20 new species in 2012.<ref name="Clowez 2012"/> In the same year, another study by Kuo and colleagues described 19 species from [[North America]],<ref name="Kuo 2012"/> while [[molecular phylogenetic]]s currently suggest there are over 60 species of ''Morchella'' worldwide.<ref name="Du 2012b"/> An extensive taxonomical and nomenclatural revision of the genus provided by Richard and colleagues in 2014, applied names to 30 of the genealogical lineages recognized so far and clarified several synonymities.<ref name="Richard 2015"/> Also in 2014, Elliott and colleagues described ''[[Morchella australiana]]'' from [[sclerophyll]] forests in [[Australia]],<ref name="Elliott 2014"/> while Clowez and colleagues described ''[[Morchella fluvialis]]'' from riparian forests in [[Spain]].<ref name="Clowez 2014"/> In 2015, Loizides and colleagues clarified the taxonomy of ''[[Morchella tridentina]]'', a cosmopolitan species described under many names, and recombined ''[[Morchella kakiicolor]]'' as a distinct species.<ref name="Loizides 2015"/> Later in the same year, Clowez and colleagues described ''[[Morchella palazonii]]'' from [[Spain]],<ref>Clowez, Philippe; Bellanger, Jean-Michel; de la Osa, Luis Romero; Moreau, Pierre-Arthur. (2015). Morchella palazonii sp. nov. (Ascomycota, Pezizales) : une nouvelle morille méditerranéenne. Clé des Morchella sect. Morchella en Europe. Documents Mycologigues XXXVI: 71–84.</ref> while Voitk and colleagues described ''[[Morchella laurentiana]]'' from [[Canada]] and ''[[Morchella eohespera]]'', a cosmopolitan species present in several continents.<ref name="Voitk 2016"/> In an extensive phylogenetic and morphological study from [[Cyprus]] in 2016, Loizides and colleagues added two more [[Mediterranean]] species, ''[[Morchella arbutiphila]]'' and ''[[Morchella disparilis]]'', and resurrected ''[[Morchella dunensis]]'' as an autonomous species.<ref name="Loizides 2016"/> In the same year, Taşkın and colleagues described four of the previously unnamed phylospecies from [[Turkey]]: ''[[Morchella conifericola]]'', ''[[Morchella feekensis]]'', ''[[Morchella magnispora]]'' and ''[[Morchella mediteterraneensis]]''.<ref name="Taşkın2016"/> |
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{{Div col| |
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}} |
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====Section ''Rufobrunnea''==== |
==== Section ''Rufobrunnea'' ==== |
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*''[[Morchella anatolica]]'' |
*''[[Morchella anatolica]]'' |
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**synonym: ''[[Morchella lanceolata]]'' |
**synonym: ''[[Morchella lanceolata]]'' |
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**synonyms: ''[[Morchella acerina]]'', ''[[Morchella anthracina]]'', ''[[Morchella lepida]]'', ''[[Morchella robiniae]]'', ''[[Morchella spongiola]]'' |
**synonyms: ''[[Morchella acerina]]'', ''[[Morchella anthracina]]'', ''[[Morchella lepida]]'', ''[[Morchella robiniae]]'', ''[[Morchella spongiola]]'' |
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====Section ''Distantes''==== |
==== Section ''Distantes'' ==== |
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*''[[Morchella angusticeps]]'' |
*''[[Morchella angusticeps]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella arbutiphila]]'' |
*''[[Morchella arbutiphila]]'' |
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**synonym: ''[[Morchella capitata]]'' |
**synonym: ''[[Morchella capitata]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella feekensis]]'' |
*''[[Morchella feekensis]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella iberica]]''<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Clowez |first1=P. |last2=Marcos Martinez |first2=J. |last3=Sanjaume |first3=R. |last4=Marques |first4=G. |last5=Bellanger |first5=J. M. |last6=Moreau |first6=P. A. |title=A survey of half-free morels in Spain reveals a new species: ''Morchella iberica'' sp. nov. (Ascomycota, Pezizales) |website=Ascomycete.org |date=2020 |volume=12 |issue=1 |doi=10.25664/art-0291|pages=11–18|doi-access=free}}</ref><!--Yes, the journal's title is "Ascomycete.org"--> |
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*''[[Morchella importuna]]'' |
*''[[Morchella importuna]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella kakiicolor]]'' |
*''[[Morchella kakiicolor]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella laurentiana]]'' |
*''[[Morchella laurentiana]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella magnispora]]'' |
*''[[Morchella magnispora]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella |
*''[[Morchella mediterraneensis]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella populiphila]]'' |
*''[[Morchella populiphila]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella pulchella]]'' |
*''[[Morchella pulchella]]'' |
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**synonyms: ''[[Morchella elata var. purpurascens]]'', ''[[Morchella conica]]'', ''[[Morchella conica var. purpurascens]]'', ''[[Morchella conica var. crassa]]'' |
**synonyms: ''[[Morchella elata var. purpurascens]]'', ''[[Morchella conica]]'', ''[[Morchella conica var. purpurascens]]'', ''[[Morchella conica var. crassa]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella semilibera]]'' |
*''[[Morchella semilibera]]'' |
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**synonyms: ''[[Morchella gigas]]'', ''[[Morchella gigas var. tintinnabulum]]'', ''[[Morchella hybrida]]'', ''[[Morchella undosa]]'', ''[[Morchella varisiensis]]'', ''[[Morchella esculenta var. crassipes]]'', ''[[Phallus gigas]]'', ''[[Eromitra gigas]]'', ''[[Phallus undosus]]'', ''[[Phallus crassipes]]'', ''[[Mitrophora hybrida]]'', ''[[Mitrophora hybrida var. crassipes]]'', ''[[Ptychoverpa gigas]]'', ''[[Helvella hybrida]]'' |
**synonyms: ''[[Morchella gigas]]'', ''[[Morchella gigas var. tintinnabulum]]'', ''[[Morchella hybrida]]'', ''[[Morchella undosa]]'', ''[[Morchella varisiensis]]'', ''[[Morchella esculenta var. crassipes]]'', ''[[Phallus gigas]]'', ''[[Eromitra gigas]]'', ''[[Phallus undosus]]'', ''[[Phallus crassipes]]'', ''[[Mitrophora hybrida]]'', ''[[Mitrophora hybrida var. crassipes]]'', ''[[Ptychoverpa gigas]]'', ''[[Helvella hybrida]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella septentrionalis]]'' |
*''[[Morchella septentrionalis]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella sextelata]]'' |
*''[[Morchella sextelata]]'' |
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**synonyms: ''[[Morchella quercus-ilicis]]'', ''[[Morchella frustrata]]'', ''[[Morchella elatoides]]'', ''[[Morchella elatoides var. elagans]]'', ''[[Morchella conica var. pseudoeximia]]'' |
**synonyms: ''[[Morchella quercus-ilicis]]'', ''[[Morchella frustrata]]'', ''[[Morchella elatoides]]'', ''[[Morchella elatoides var. elagans]]'', ''[[Morchella conica var. pseudoeximia]]'' |
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====Unresolved classification==== |
==== Unresolved classification ==== |
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*''[[Morchella anteridiformis]]'' |
*''[[Morchella anteridiformis]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella apicata]]'' |
*''[[Morchella apicata]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella umbrinovelutipes]]'' |
*''[[Morchella umbrinovelutipes]]'' |
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*''[[Morchella vaporaria]]'' |
*''[[Morchella vaporaria]]'' |
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{{ |
{{div col end}} |
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=== Phylogeny === |
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== Ecology, phenology and distribution == |
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Early [[phylogenetic]] analyses supported the hypothesis that the genus comprises only a few species with considerable [[phenotype|phenotypic]] variation.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Yoon CS, Gessner RV, Romano MA |year=1990 |title=Population genetics and systematics of the ''Morchella esculenta'' complex |journal=Mycologia |volume=82 |issue=2 |pages=227–235 |doi=10.2307/3759851 |jstor=3759851}}</ref><ref name="Ref_f" /><ref name="Bunyard 1995" /> Subsequent multigenic DNA studies, however, have revealed more than a dozen genealogically distinct species in [[North America]] and at least as many in [[Europe]].<ref name="mdcp" /><ref name="O'Donnell 2011" /><ref name="Taşkın 2012" /><ref name="Richard 2015" /> DNA studies revealed three discrete [[clade]]s, or genetic groups, consisting of the "white morels" (''[[Morchella rufobrunnea]]'' and ''[[Morchella anatolica|M. anatolica]]''), the "yellow morels" (''[[Morchella esculenta|M. esculenta]]'' and others), and the "black morels" (''[[Morchella elata|M. elata]]'' and others).<ref name="O'Donnell 2011" /> The fire-associated species ''[[Morchella tomentosa]]'', commonly known as the "gray morel", is distinct for its [[tomentose|fine hairs]] on the cap ridges and [[sclerotium|sclerotia]]-like underground structures, and may also deserve its own clade based on DNA evidence.<ref name="Stefani 2010" /><ref name="Kuo 2008" /><ref name="McFarlane 2005" /> Within the yellow and black clades, there are dozens of distinct species, many [[endemism|endemic]] to individual continents or regions.<ref name="O'Donnell 2011" /> This species-rich view is supported by studies in [[Western Europe]],<ref name="kell05" /> Turkey,<ref name="task10" /> [[Cyprus]],<ref name="Loizides 2016" /> [[Israel]],<ref name="Masaphy 2009" /> [[China]],<ref name="Du 2012b" /> [[Patagonia]],<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Pildain MB, Visnovsky SB, Barroetavena C |year=2014 |title=Phylogenetic diversity of true morels (''Morchella''), the main edible non-timber product from native Patagonian forests of Argentina |journal=Fungal Biology |volume=118 |issue=9–10 |pages=755–763 |doi=10.1016/j.funbio.2014.03.008 |pmid=25209634 |hdl-access=free |hdl=11336/38473}}</ref> and the [[Himalayas]].<ref name="Kanwal 2010" /> |
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[[File:White Morel IMG 0399.JPG|thumb|right|238px|Yellow morels in [[West Virginia]], USA]] |
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Early [[ancestral reconstruction]] tests by O'Donnell and collaborators postulated a [[Western United States|western North American]] origin of morels and the genus was estimated to have diverged from its closest genealogical relatives ''[[Verpa]]'' and ''[[Disciotis]]'' in the early Cretaceous, approximately 129 million years ago (Mya).<ref name="O'Donnell 2011" /> This date was later revised by Du and collaborators, placing the divergence of the genus in the late Jurassic, approximately 154 Mya.<ref name="Du 2012b" /> However, neither of these reconstructions had included ''[[Morchella anatolica]]'' in the analyses, whose phylogenetic placement remained at the time unresolved. Following genetic testing of isotype collection of ''M. anatolica'' by Taşkın and colleagues, this species was shown to nest in the ancestral /Rufobrunnea clade, together with the transcontinental ''M. rufobrunnea''.<ref name="Taşkın 2012" /> This cast doubts over the accuracy of the original reconstructions, since both species of the ancestral /Rufobrunnea clade are present in the Mediterranean, while ''M. anatolica'' is altogether absent from North America.<ref name="Loizides 2015" /><ref name="Loizides 2016" /> Updated ancestral area reconstructions by Loizides and colleagues using an expanded 79-species data set, have in 2021 refuted the previous hypothesis and designated the [[Mediterranean basin]] as the most probable place of origin of morels.<ref name="Loizides 2021" /> |
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The ecology of ''Morchella'' species is not well understood. Many species appear to form [[symbiotic relationship|symbiotic]] or [[endophytic]] relationships with trees,<ref name="Buscot 1987"/><ref name="Buscot 1992"/><ref name="Dahlstrom 2000"/><ref name="Tedersoo 2010"/> while others appear to act as [[saprotroph]]s.<ref name="Stefani 2010"/><ref name="Dahlstrom 2000"/> Yellow morels (''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' and related species) are more commonly found under [[deciduous trees]] rather than [[conifers]], while black morels (''[[Morchella elata]]'' and related species) are mostly found in coniferous forests, disturbed ground and recently burned areas.<ref name="Clowez 2012"/><ref name="Loizides 2016"/><ref name="Lincoff 1981"/><ref name="Du 2015"/> ''[[Morchella galilaea]]'',<ref name="Taşkın 2015"/> and occasionally ''[[Morchella rufobrunnea]]'',<ref name="Masaphy 2009"/><ref name="Loizides 2011"/><ref name="Loizides 2015"/> appear to fruit in the autumn or winter months rather than spring, which is the typical fruiting season for morels. |
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== Distribution and habitat == |
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Tree species associated with ''Morchela'' vary greatly depending on the individual species, continent, or region. Trees commonly associated with morels in [[Europe]] and across the [[Mediterranean]] include ''[[Abies]]'' (fir), ''[[Pinus]]'' (pine), ''[[Populus]]'' (poplar), ''[[Ulmus]]'' (elm), ''[[Quercus]]'' (oak), ''[[Arbutus]]'' (strawberry trees), ''[[Castanea (plant)|Castanea]]'' (chestnut), ''[[Alnus]]'' (alder), ''[[Olea]]'' (olive trees), ''[[Malus]]'' (apple trees) and ''[[Fraxinus]]'' (ash).<ref name="Clowez 2012"/><ref name="Loizides 2016"/><ref name="Loizides 2015"/><ref name="Taşkın 2012"/> In western North America morels are often found in coniferous forests, including species of ''[[Pinus]]'' (pine), ''[[Abies]]'' (fir), ''[[Larix]]'' (larch), and ''[[Pseudotsuga]]'' (Douglas-fir), as well as in ''[[Populus]]'' (cottonwood) [[riparian zone|riparian]] forests.<ref name=pnwrs/><ref name="Kuo 2012"/> Deciduous trees commonly associated with morels in the northern hemisphere include ''[[Fraxinus]]'' (ash), ''[[Platanus]]'' (sycamore), ''[[Liriodendron]]'' (tulip tree), dead and dying [[elms]], [[Populus sect. Aegiros|cottonwoods]] and old [[apple tree]]s (remnants of [[orchards]]).<ref name="Kuo 2012"/> Due to their springtime [[phenology]] (March–May), morels are hardly ever found in the vicinity of common poisonous mushrooms such as the [[death cap]] (''[[Amanita phalloides]]''), the [[sulphur tuft]] (''[[Hypholoma fasciculare]]''), or the [[fly agaric]] (''[[Amanita muscaria]]'').<ref name="Mihail 2007"/> They can, however, occur alongside [[false morels]] (''[[Gyromitra]]'' and ''[[Verpa]]'' species) and elfin saddles (''[[Helvella]]'' species), which also appear in spring. |
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Morels can be found in the temperate [[Northern Hemisphere]], in particular North America, Turkey, China, the Himalayas, [[India]], and [[Pakistan]].{{Citation needed|date=April 2024}}[[File:White Morel IMG 0399.JPG|thumb|Yellow morels in [[West Virginia]], US]] |
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Yellow morels (''[[Morchella esculenta]]'' and related species) are more commonly found under [[deciduous]] trees rather than [[conifer]]s, while black morels (''[[Morchella elata|M. elata]]'' and related species) are mostly found in coniferous forests, disturbed ground and recently burned areas.<ref name="Clowez 2012" /><ref name="Loizides 2016" /><ref name="Lincoff 1981" /><ref name="Du 2015" /> ''[[Morchella galilaea]]'',<ref name="Taşkın 2015" /> and occasionally ''M. rufobrunnea'',<ref name="Masaphy 2009" /><ref name="Loizides 2011" /><ref name="Loizides 2015" /> appear to fruit in the autumn or winter months rather than spring, which is the typical fruiting season for morels. In the American [[Pacific Northwest]], they can be found from April to August.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Seasonal Chart for Edible Mushrooms |url=https://www.centraloregonmushroomclub.com/Mushroom-Seasons.htm?m=102&s=866 |access-date=2024-03-31 |website=Central Oregon Mushroom Club}}</ref> |
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Efforts to [[Fungiculture|cultivate]] morels at a large scale have rarely been successful and the commercial morel industry relies on the harvest of wild mushrooms.<ref name=pnwrs/> |
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Efforts to [[Fungiculture|cultivate]] morels at a large scale have rarely been successful and the commercial morel industry relies on the harvest of wild mushrooms.<ref name="pnwrs" /> |
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=== Association with wildfire === |
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[[Image:LongNek1.JPG|thumb|left|Longneck morel in [[Indiana]], USA]] |
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Certain ''Morchella'' species (''[[Morchella eximia|M. eximia]]'', ''[[Morchella importuna|M. importuna]]'', ''[[Morchella tomentosa|M. tomentosa]]'' and others) exhibit a [[Pyrophyte|pyrophilic]] behaviour and may grow abundantly in forests which have been recently burned by a [[forest fire|fire]].<ref name="Green 2010"/><ref name="Wurtz 2005"/> The mechanism for this behavior is not well understood,<ref name="Stefani 2010"/> but appears to be related to both the death of trees and the removal of organic material from the [[forest floor]].<ref name="Green 2010"/> Moderate-intensity fires are reported to produce higher abundances of morels than low- or high-intensity fires.<ref name="McFarlane 2005"/> Where fire suppression is practiced, morels often grow in small amounts in the same spot year after year. If these areas are overrun by wildfire they often produce a bumper crop of black morels the following spring. Commercial pickers and buyers in North America target recently burned areas for this reason. These spots may be closely guarded by mushroom pickers, as morels are widely regarded as a [[delicacy]] and often a [[cash crop]].<ref name=pnwrs/> |
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=== Transcontinental species === |
=== Transcontinental species === |
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[[File:Morchella elata 4846.JPG|thumb|Black morel in [[Washington state]]]] |
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Although the majority of species within ''Morchella'' exhibit high continental [[endemism]] and provincialism,<ref name="O'Donnell 2011"/> several species have been phylogenetically shown to be present in more than one continent. So far, the list of transcontinental species includes ''[[Morchella americana|M. americana]]'', ''[[Morchella eohespera|M. eohespera]]'', ''[[Morchella eximia|M. eximia]]'', ''[[Morchella exuberans|M. exuberans]]'', ''[[Morchella galilaea|M. galilaea]]'', ''[[Morchella importuna|M. importuna]]'', ''[[Morchella populiphila|M. populiphila]]'', ''[[Morchella pulchella|M. pulchella]]'', ''[[Morchella rufobrunnea|M. rufobrunnea]]'', ''[[Morchella semilibera|M. semilibera]]'', ''[[Morchella sextelata|M. sextelata]]'', ''[[Morchella steppicola|M. steppicola]]'' and ''[[Morchella tridentina|M. tridentina]]''.<ref name="Du 2012b"/><ref name="Richard 2015"/><ref name="Loizides 2016"/><ref name="Loizides2017"/> The reasons behind the widespread, cosmopolitan distribution of these species, are still puzzling. Some authors have hypothesized that such transcontinental occurrences are the result of accidental anthropogenic [[introduced species|introductions]],<ref name=task10/><ref name="O'Donnell 2011"/> but this view has been disputed by others, who suggested an old and natural distribution, at least for some of these species which appear to be linked to indigenous flora.<ref name="Loizides 2015"/><ref name="Loizides 2016"/> Long-distance spore dispersal has also been suggested as a possible [[biological dispersal|dispersal]] mechanism for some species, especially those belonging to fire-adapted [[Lineage (evolution)|lineages]].<ref name="Du 2012"/> |
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Although many species within ''Morchella'' exhibit continental [[endemism]] and provincialism,<ref name="O'Donnell 2011" /> several species have been phylogenetically shown to be present in more than one continent. So far, the list of transcontinental species includes ''[[Morchella americana|M. americana]]'', ''[[Morchella eohespera|M. eohespera]]'', ''[[Morchella eximia|M. eximia]]'', ''[[Morchella exuberans|M. exuberans]]'', ''[[Morchella galilaea|M. galilaea]]'', ''[[Morchella importuna|M. importuna]]'', ''[[Morchella populiphila|M. populiphila]]'', ''[[Morchella pulchella|M. pulchella]]'', ''[[Morchella rufobrunnea|M. rufobrunnea]]'', ''[[Morchella semilibera|M. semilibera]]'', ''[[Morchella sextelata|M. sextelata]]'', ''[[Morchella steppicola|M. steppicola]]'', and ''[[Morchella tridentina|M. tridentina]]''.<ref name="Du 2012b" /><ref name="Richard 2015" /><ref name="Loizides 2016" /><ref name="Loizides2017" /> The reasons behind the widespread, cosmopolitan distribution of these species, are still puzzling. Some authors have hypothesized that such transcontinental occurrences are the result of accidental anthropogenic [[introduced species|introductions]],<ref name="task10" /><ref name="O'Donnell 2011" /> but this view has been disputed by others, who suggested an old and natural distribution, at least for some of these species which appear to be linked to indigenous flora.<ref name="Loizides 2015" /><ref name="Loizides 2016" /><ref name="Loizides 2021" /> Long-distance spore dispersal has also been suggested as a possible [[biological dispersal|dispersal]] mechanism for some species, especially those belonging to fire-adapted [[Lineage (evolution)|lineages]].<ref name="Du 2012" /> It has been suggested that the widespread but disjunct distribution of some morel species, especially early diverging lineages like ''[[Morchella rufobrunnea|M. rufobrunnea]]'' and ''[[Morchella tridentina|M. tridentina]]'', may be the result of climatic refugia from the [[Quaternary glaciation]].<ref name="Loizides 2021" /> |
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==In popular culture== |
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==Ecology== |
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Morel hunting, or ''molly mooching'' as it is known in southern [[West Virginia]], is a hugely popular springtime activity. These edible wild fungi keep morel hunters on their toes – their distinctive wrinkled caps form a giraffish pattern unique to their kind. They can be incredibly hard to find, very good at looking exactly like a pile of curled, dead brown leaves on the forest floor. Mushroom ethics among collectors mandate the mesh collecting bag, so the spores can scatter as one carries home their harvest.<ref>{{cite book|title=''Excerpts from the book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, by Barbara Kingsolver.' Animal, Vegetable, Miracle|publisher=Harper Perennial|pages=77-80}}</ref> |
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The ecology of ''Morchella'' species is not well understood. Many species appear to form [[symbiotic relationship|symbiotic]] or [[endophytic]] relationships with trees,<ref name="Buscot 1987" /><ref name="Buscot 1992" /><ref name="Dahlstrom 2000" /><ref name="Tedersoo 2010" /> while others appear to act as [[saprotroph]]s.<ref name="Stefani 2010" /><ref name="Dahlstrom 2000" /> |
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Every spring, hundreds of morel enthusiasts gather in [[Boyne City]], [[Michigan]] for the ''National Morel Mushroom Festival'', an event which has been taking place for over half a century now.<ref>http://bcmorelfestival.com</ref> Such gatherings serve as meeting points for morel pilgrims, collectors, friends and tourists alike, who come together to share stories, experiences, enjoy exotic morel recipes and engage in morel [[mushroom hunting|hunting]]. As Kuo puts it, "if there is a modern, North American reenactment of [[Geoffrey Chaucer]]'s [[Canterbury Tales]] this is it."<ref name="Kuo 2005"/> Other festivals and hunting competitions in [[North America]] include the ''Illinois State Morel Mushroom Hunting Championship'' and the ''Ottawa Midwest Morel Fest''. |
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Tree species associated with ''Morchella'' vary greatly depending on the individual species, continent, or region. Trees commonly associated with morels in Europe and across the [[Mediterranean]] include ''[[Abies]]'' (fir), ''[[Pinus]]'' (pine), ''[[Populus]]'' (poplar), ''[[Ulmus]]'' (elm), ''[[Quercus]]'' (oak), ''[[Arbutus]]'' (strawberry trees), ''[[Castanea (plant)|Castanea]]'' (chestnut), ''[[Alnus]]'' (alder), ''[[Olea]]'' (olive trees), ''[[Malus]]'' (apple trees), and ''[[Fraxinus]]'' (ash).<ref name="Clowez 2012" /><ref name="Loizides 2016" /><ref name="Loizides 2015" /><ref name="Taşkın 2012" /><ref name="Loizides 2021" /> In western North America morels are often found in coniferous forests, including species of ''[[Pinus]]'' (pine), ''[[Abies]]'' (fir), ''[[Larix]]'' (larch), and ''[[Pseudotsuga]]'' (Douglas-fir), as well as in ''[[Populus]]'' (cottonwood) [[riparian zone|riparian]] forests.<ref name="pnwrs" /><ref name="Kuo 2012" /> Deciduous trees commonly associated with morels in the northern hemisphere include ''[[Fraxinus]]'' (ash), ''[[Platanus]]'' (sycamore), ''[[Liriodendron]]'' (tulip tree), dead and dying [[elm]]s, [[Populus sect. Aigeiros|cottonwoods]], and old [[apple tree]]s (remnants of [[orchard]]s).<ref name="Kuo 2012" /> Due to their springtime [[phenology]] (March–May), morels are hardly ever found in the vicinity of common poisonous mushrooms such as the [[death cap]] (''Amanita phalloides''), the [[sulphur tuft]] (''Hypholoma fasciculare''), or the [[fly agaric]] (''Amanita muscaria'').<ref name="Mihail 2007" /> They can, however, occur alongside [[false morel]]s (''[[Gyromitra]]'' and ''[[Verpa]]'' species) and elfin saddles (''[[Helvella]]'' species), which also appear in spring. |
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=== Vernacular names === |
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=== Association with wildfire === |
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''Morchella'' species have been called by many local names; some of the more colorful include ''dryland fish'', because when sliced lengthwise then breaded and fried, their outline resembles the shape of a fish;<ref name="Lincoff 2011"/> ''hickory chickens'', as they are known in many parts of [[Kentucky]]; and ''merkels'' or ''miracles'', based on [[folklore]], of how a mountain family was saved from starvation by eating morels. In parts of [[West Virginia]], they are known as ''molly moochers'' or ''muggins''. Due to the partial structural and textural similarity to some species of ''[[Porifera]]'' (sponges), another common name for any true morel is ''sponge mushroom''. In the Appalachian woodlands, morels have also been called ''haystacks'', or ''snakeheads''.<ref>{{cite book|title=''Excerpts from the book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, by Barbara Kingsolver.' Animal, Vegetable, Miracle|publisher=Harper Perennial|pages=77-80}}</ref> The [[Finnish language|Finnish]] vernacular name ''huhtasieni'', refers to ''huhta'', area cleared for agriculture by the slash and burn method.<ref name="Cunningham 2012"/> |
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[[File:LongNek1.JPG|thumb|''Morchella semilibera'' in [[Indiana]], US]] |
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Certain ''Morchella'' species (''[[Morchella eximia|M. eximia]]'', ''[[Morchella importuna|M. importuna]]'', ''[[Morchella tomentosa|M. tomentosa]]'' and others) exhibit a [[Pyrophyte|pyrophilic]] behaviour and may grow abundantly in forests which have been recently burned by a [[forest fire|fire]].<ref name="Green 2010" /><ref name="Wurtz 2005" /> Moderate-intensity fires are reported to produce higher abundances of morels than low- or high-intensity fires.<ref name="McFarlane 2005" /> This is caused by the soil becoming more alkaline as the result of [[wood ash]] combining with water and being absorbed into the soil which triggers the morels to fruit. [[Alkali soil|Alkaline soil]] conditions which trigger fruiting have been observed and exploited with small-scale commercial cultivation of morels.<ref name="YouTube 2019 Growing Morels">Archived at [https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211211/lTFugHA2WaI Ghostarchive]{{cbignore}} and the [https://web.archive.org/web/20150904170729/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTFugHA2WaI Wayback Machine]{{cbignore}}: {{cite web |date=2019-11-08 |title=YouTube |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTFugHA2WaI |access-date=2019-11-11 |website=YouTube Growing Morels}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref name="Stefani 2010" /><ref name="Green 2010" /> Where fire suppression is practiced, morels often grow in small numbers in the same spot, year after year. If these areas are overrun by wildfire they often produce a bumper crop of black morels the following spring. Commercial pickers and buyers in North America target recently burned areas for this reason. These spots may be closely guarded by mushroom pickers, as morels are widely regarded as a [[delicacy]] and often a [[cash crop]].<ref name="pnwrs" /> |
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The scientific name of the genus ''Morchella'' itself, is thought to have derived from ''morchel'',<ref name="Burnett 1835"/> an old [[German language|German]] word for "mushroom" (this may be another source for the name "merkel"), while the word "morel" is derived from the Latin ''maurus'', meaning "brown".{{Citation needed|date=June 2016}} |
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== Cultivation == |
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== Gastronomical value and culinary uses == |
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Due to the mushroom's prized fruit bodies, several attempts have been made to grow the fungus in culture. In 1901, Repin reported successfully obtaining fruit bodies in a cave in which cultures had been established in flower pots nine years previously in 1892.<ref name="Repin1901">{{cite journal |author=Repin C. |year=1901 |title=Sur la culture de la Morille |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/41549#605 |journal=Revue générale des sciences pures et appliquées |volume=12 |pages=595–96 |access-date=2010-03-21}}</ref> |
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[[File:Morilles.jpg|thumb|left|Yellow morels in [[France]]]] |
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More recently, small-scale commercial growers have had success growing morels by using partially shaded rows of mulched wood. The rows of mulch piles are inoculated with morel mushroom spores in a solution of water and molasses which are poured over the piles of mulch and then they are allowed to grow undisturbed for several weeks. A solution of wood ashes mixed in water and diluted is subsequently poured over the rows of wood mulch which triggers fruiting of the morels. Morels are known to appear after fires and the alkalinity produced by wood ash mixed with water initiate fruit body formation for most species of morels.<ref name="YouTube 2019 Growing Morels" /> |
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Morels are a feature of many cuisines, including [[Provence|Provençal]].<ref name="Olney 1995"/> Their unique flavor is prized by [[chef]]s worldwide, with recipes and preparation methods designed to highlight and preserve it.<ref name="Acton 2007"/> As with most [[Edible mushroom|edible fungi]], they are best when collected or bought fresh. One of the best and simplest ways to enjoy morels is by gently sauteeing them in butter, cracking pepper on top and sprinkling with salt. They make great additions to meat and poultry dishes, [[soup]]s, or can be used as [[pasta]] fillings.<ref name="Wright 2007"/> However, as morels are known to contain [[thermolabile]] toxins, they must always be cooked before eating. {{see also|#Toxicity}} |
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In 2021 it was announced that indoor cultivation of black morels had been successfully achieved after decades of research and experimentation with methods by [[The Danish Morel Project]]. The project has been able to cultivate 20 lbs of morels per square yard or around 10 kg per square metre with cost estimates expected to be similar to producing white button mushrooms (''[[Agaricus bisporus]]''). Previous attempts at cultivation had managed to produce [[Sclerotium|sclerotia]] but encountered issues in getting them to reliably fruit. One of the breakthroughs with this project was growing them in a climate controlled environment in conjunction with grass which is involved in stimulating fruiting in the morel mycelium. Cultivation in this manner has been noted to produce superior morels for culinary uses since they can be assured to be insect, slug and dirt free and therefore do not need to be washed and cleaned like foraged morels. Since washing morels can negatively impact the texture, reliable cultivation may result in more versatility with this ingredient in the kitchen as well as making the delicacy more affordable and accessible.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-11-16 |title=The Morel Project - The Danish Morel Project |url=https://thedanishmorelproject.com/the-morel-project/ |access-date=2022-07-12 |language=en-GB}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Gamillo |first=Elizabeth |date=2022-05-02 |title=Danish Biologists Cultivate Morel Mushrooms Year-Round With New Indoor Technique |url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/danish-biologists-find-technique-to-cultivate-morel-mushrooms-year-round-180980007/ |access-date=2022-07-12 |website=Smithsonian Magazine |language=en}}</ref> |
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[[File:Morchella elata group 38336.jpg|thumb|Black morels in [[British Columbia]], Canada]] |
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Morels can be preserved in several ways: They can be [[flash freezing|'flash frozen']] by simply running under cold water or putting them in a bucket to soak for a few minutes, then spread on a [[Sheet pan|baking tray]] and placed into a freezer. After freezing, they keep very well with the frozen glaze for a long time in airtight plastic containers. However, when thawed they can sometimes turn slightly mushy, so they are best frozen after [[steaming]] or [[frying]]. Due to their natural porosity, morels may contain trace amounts of soil which cannot be easily washed out. Any visible soil should be removed with a brush, after cutting the body in half lengthwise, if needed. Mushroom hunters sometimes recommend soaking morels in a bowl of salt water briefly prior to cooking, although many chefs would disagree.<ref>{{cite book|title=''Excerpts from the book Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, by Barbara Kingsolver.' Animal, Vegetable, Miracle|publisher=Harper Perennial|pages=77-80}}</ref> |
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== Toxicity == |
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[[Food drying|Drying]] is a popular and effective method for long-term storage, and morels are widely available commercially in this form. Any [[Larva|insect larvae]] which might be present in the fruit bodies usually drops out during the drying process.<ref name="http://www.mssf.org/cookbook/morels.html">[http://www.mssf.org/cookbook/morels.html Wild About Mushrooms: Morels]. Mssf.org. Retrieved on 2012-04-17.</ref> Dried morels can then be reconstituted by soaking for 10–20 minutes in warm water or milk, and the soaking liquid can be used as stock.<ref name="Carluccio 2003"/> |
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The consumption of ''Morchella'' species can have adverse effects. In 2023, a Montana [[sushi]] restaurant serving them was linked to 51 people who experienced [[gastrointestinal illness]], with two reported deaths and three other hospitalizations.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Suter |first=Tara |date=2024-03-15 |title=Morel mushrooms linked to deadly outbreak in Montana: CDC |url=https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/4534491-morel-mushrooms-montana-deadly-outbreak-cdc/ |access-date=2024-03-17 |website=The Hill |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Del Rey |first=Michelle |date=2024-04-22 |title=Mom died after eating uncooked morel mushroom at sushi joint |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/montana-mushroom-death-sushi-food-poisoning-b2532939.html |access-date=2024-04-22 |website=The Independent |language=en}}</ref> The consumption of raw morels in particular is advised against.<ref name="Hall 2003" /> An unknown toxin<ref name="Lagrange 2020" /> can be neutralized via cooking.<ref name="Hall 2003" /> Additionally, cooked morels can reportedly cause symptoms of [[upset stomach]] when consumed with alcohol.<ref name="Groves 1964" /> |
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{{clear left}} |
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When eating this fungus for the first time, it is advised to consume a small amount to minimize any allergic reaction. As with all fungi, morels for consumption must be clean and free of decay. Morels growing in old [[apple]] orchards previously treated with the deprecated insecticide [[lead arsenate]] may [[bioaccumulation|accumulate]] levels of toxic [[lead]] and [[arsenic]] that are unsuitable for human consumption.<ref name="Shavit 2010" /> |
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The supreme flavour of morels is not just appreciated by humans; in [[Yellowstone National Park]], black morels are also known to be consumed by [[grizzly bear]]s (''Ursus arctos horribilis'').<ref name="Mattson 2002"/> |
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== Uses == |
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Morels, "almost universally associated with spring," can be found in many habitats. Morel may be more likely to fruit during a period of increasing heat following a chilly period, a preference which is credited for their abundance in areas with cold winters.<ref name="Arora-1986">{{Cite book |last=Arora |first=David |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/13702933 |title=Mushrooms demystified : a comprehensive guide to the fleshy fungi |date=1986 |publisher=Ten Speed Press |isbn=0-89815-170-8 |edition=2nd |location=Berkeley |pages=785–793 |oclc=13702933}}</ref> |
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''Morchella'' species contain small amounts of [[hydrazine]]<ref name="Stamets 2005"/> [[toxins]] that are destroyed through cooking; because of this, morels should never be eaten raw.<ref name="Hall 2003"/> It has been reported that even cooked morels can sometimes cause symptoms of [[upset stomach]] when consumed with alcohol.<ref name="Groves 1964"/> <!-- Hydrazine toxicity is different than what is seen in morels - hydrazine kills people while morels just make people sick. Also morel toxicity happens pretty soon after eating them, while hydrazines take much longer to cause illness. I think Mycellium Running got it wrong. -Alan Rockefeller --> |
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Black morels (''[[Morchella elata]]'') are often found on land that has been disturbed by logging burning.<ref name="Arora-1986" /> |
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When eating this fungus for the first time it is wise to consume a small amount to minimize any allergic reaction. As with all fungi, morels for consumption must be clean and free of decay. Morels growing in old [[apple]] [[orchard]]s that had been treated with the [[insecticide]] [[lead hydrogen arsenate|lead arsenate]] may [[bioaccumulation|accumulate]] levels of toxic [[lead]] and [[arsenic]] that are unsuitable for human consumption.<ref name="Shavit 2010"/> |
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== |
=== Nutrition === |
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{{nutritional value |
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{{Main|False morel}} |
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| name = Morel mushrooms, raw |
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When gathering morels for the table, care must be taken to distinguish them from the poisonous "[[false morels]]", a term loosely applied to describe ''[[Gyromitra esculenta]]'', ''[[Verpa bohemica]]'', and other morel lookalikes. Although false morels are sometimes eaten without ill effect, they can cause severe gastrointestinal upset, loss of muscular coordination (including cardiac muscle), or even death.<ref name="Michelot 1991"/><ref>Bresinsky A, Besl H. (1990). A colour atlas of poisonous fungi. Wolfe Publishing Ltd, London.</ref> Incidents of [[Mushroom poisoning|poisoning]] usually occur when they are eaten in large quantities, inadequately cooked, or over several days in a row. False morels contain [[gyromitrin]], an organic [[carcinogenic]] poison, hydrolyzed in the body into [[monomethylhydrazine]] (MMH).<ref name="Karlson-Stiber 2003"/> ''[[Gyromitra esculenta]]'' in particular, has been reported to be responsible for up to 23% of mushroom fatalities each year in [[Poland]].<ref name="Lampe 1979"/> |
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| water = 90 g |
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| kJ = 129 |
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| protein = 3.12 g |
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| fat = 0.57 g |
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| carbs = 5.1 g |
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| fiber = 2.8 g |
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| sugars = 0.6 g |
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| calcium_mg = 43 |
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| iron_mg = 12.18 |
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| magnesium_mg = 19 |
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| phosphorus_mg = 194 |
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| potassium_mg = 411 |
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| zinc_mg = 2.03 |
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| manganese_mg = 0.587 |
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| thiamin_mg = 0.069 |
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| riboflavin_mg = 0.205 |
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| niacin_mg = 2.252 |
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| pantothenic_mg = 0.44 |
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| folate_ug = 9 |
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| vitB6_mg = 0.136 |
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| vitD_ug = 5.1 |
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| source_usda = 1 |
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| note = [https://fdc.nal.usda.gov/fdc-app.html#/food-details/168423/nutrients Link to USDA Database entry] |
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}} |
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Raw morel mushrooms are 90% water, 5% [[carbohydrate]]s, 3% [[protein (nutrient)|protein]], and 1% [[fat]]. A 100 gram reference amount supplies 31 [[calorie]]s, and is a rich source of [[iron]] (94% of the [[Daily Value]], DV), [[manganese]], [[phosphorus]], [[zinc]], and vitamin D (34% DV, if having been exposed to sunlight or artificial [[ultraviolet light]]). Raw morels contain moderate levels of several [[B vitamins]] (table). |
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=== Gastronomical value and culinary uses === |
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The key morphological features distinguishing false morels from true morels are as follows: |
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They have been called "prized delicacies...they are so esteemed in Europe that people used to set fire to their own forests in hopes of eliciting a bountiful morel crop the next spring!"<ref name="Arora-1986" /> |
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Morels are a feature of many cuisines, including [[French cuisine#Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur|Provençal]].<ref name="Olney 1995" /> Their flavor is prized by [[chef]]s worldwide, with recipes and preparation methods designed to highlight and preserve it.<ref name="Acton 2007" /> As with most [[Edible mushroom|edible fungi]], they are best when collected or bought fresh. They are sometimes added to meat and poultry dishes and soups, and can be used as [[pasta]] fillings.<ref name="Wright 2007" /> As morels are known to contain [[thermolabile]] toxins, they must always be cooked before eating. |
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* ''[[Gyromitra]]'' species often have a "wrinkled" or "cerebral" (brain-like) appearance to the cap due to multiple wrinkles and folds, rather than the honeycomb appearance of true morels due to ridges and pits. |
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* ''[[Gyromitra esculenta]]'' has a cap that is usually reddish-brown in colour, but sometimes also chestnut, purplish-brown, or dark brown. |
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Morels can be preserved in several ways: They can be [[flash freezing|'flash frozen']] by simply running under cold water or putting them in a bucket to soak for a few minutes, then spread on a [[Sheet pan|baking tray]] and placed into a freezer. After freezing, they keep very well with the frozen glaze for a long time in airtight containers. However, when thawed they can sometimes turn slightly mushy, so they are best frozen after [[steaming]] or [[frying]]. Due to their natural porosity, morels may contain trace amounts of soil which cannot be easily washed out. Any visible soil should be removed with a brush, after cutting the body in half lengthwise, if needed. Mushroom hunters sometimes recommend soaking morels in a bowl of salt water briefly prior to cooking, although many chefs would disagree.<ref name="Harper Perennial" /> |
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* ''[[Gyromitra]]'' species are typically chambered in longitudinal section, while ''[[Verpa]]'' species contain a cottony substance inside their stem, in contrast to true morels which are always hollow. |
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* The caps of ''[[Verpa]]'' species (''[[Verpa bohemica|V. bohemica]]'', ''[[Verpa conica|V. conica]]'' and others) are attached to the stem only at the apex (top of the cap), unlike true morels which have caps that are attached to the stem at, or near the base of the cap. The easiest way to distinguish ''[[Verpa]]'' species from ''Morchella'' species is to slice them longitudinally.<ref name="Kuo 2007"/><ref name="Kuo 2005"/> |
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[[Food drying|Drying]] is a popular and effective method for long-term storage, and morels are widely available commercially in this form. Any [[Larva|insect larvae]] which might be present in the fruit bodies usually drop out during the drying process.<ref name="http://www.mssf.org/cookbook/morels.html">[http://www.mssf.org/cookbook/morels.html Wild About Mushrooms: Morels]. Mssf.org. Retrieved on 2012-04-17.</ref> Dried morels can then be reconstituted by soaking for 10–20 minutes in warm water or milk, and the soaking liquid can be used as stock.<ref name="Carluccio 2003" /> |
|||
The flavor of morels is not just appreciated by humans; in [[Yellowstone National Park]], black morels are also known to be consumed by [[grizzly bear]]s (''Ursus arctos horribilis'').<ref name="Mattson 2002" /> |
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== In popular culture == |
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Morel hunting is a common springtime activity. Mushroom collectors may carry a mesh collecting bag, so the spores can scatter as one carries the harvest.<ref name="Harper Perennial">{{cite book|last=Kingsolver|first=Barbara|title=Animal, Vegetable, Miracle|publisher=Harper Perennial|pages=77–80}}</ref> |
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Every spring, hundreds of morel enthusiasts gather in [[Boyne City, Michigan]] for the National Morel Mushroom Festival, a century-old event.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://bcmorelfestival.com/|title=National Morel Mushroom Festival|website=bcmorelfestival.com|language=en-US|access-date=2018-08-10}}</ref> As one observer stated, "if there is a modern, North American reenactment of [[Geoffrey Chaucer]]'s ''[[Canterbury Tales]]'' this is it."<ref name="Kuo 2005" /> Other festivals and hunting competitions in [[North America]] include the Illinois State Morel Mushroom Hunting Championship, the Ottawa Midwest Morel Fest and the Mesick Michigan Mushroom Festival.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.mesick-mushroomfest.org/schedule.html|title=Annual Mesick Mushroom Festival}}</ref> |
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=== Vernacular names === |
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''Morchella'' species have been called by many local names; some of the more colorful include ''dryland fish'', because when sliced lengthwise then breaded and fried, their outline resembles the shape of a fish;<ref name="Lincoff 2011" /> ''hickory chickens'', as they are known in many parts of [[Kentucky]]; and ''merkels'' or ''miracles'', based on [[folklore]], of how a mountain family was saved from starvation by eating morels. In parts of [[West Virginia]], they are known as ''molly moochers'', ''muggins'', or ''muggles''. Due to the partial structural and textural similarity to some species of ''[[Porifera]]'' (sponges), other common names for any true morel are ''sponge mushroom'' and ''[[waffle]] mushroom''. In the Appalachian woodlands, morels have also been called ''haystacks'', or ''snakeheads''.<ref name="Harper Perennial" /> The [[Finnish language|Finnish]] vernacular name ''huhtasieni'', refers to ''huhta'', area cleared for agriculture by the slash and burn method.<ref name="Cunningham 2012" /> |
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The scientific name of the genus ''Morchella'' itself, is thought to have derived from ''morchel'',<ref name="Burnett 1835" /> an old [[German language|German]] word close to "Möhre", carrot or beet, due to similarity in shape. |
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<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px"> |
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File:Morilles.jpg|left|Yellow morels in [[France]] |
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File:Morchella elata group 38336.jpg|Black morels in [[British Columbia]], Canada |
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File:Morel in Ben Shemen Israel.jpg|Morel in a house garden in [[Ben Shemen]], Israel |
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</gallery> |
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== See also == |
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{{Portal|Fungi}} |
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* {{Portal inline|Fungi}} |
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{{Clear}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist|colwidth=30em|refs= |
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em|refs= |
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<ref name="Acton 2007">{{cite book | |
<ref name="Acton 2007">{{cite book |vauthors=Acton J, Sandler N |year=2007 |title=Mushroom |publisher=Watermill Books |page=160 |isbn=978-1856267397}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Boudier 1897">{{cite journal |author=Boudier E. |year=1897 |title=Révision analytique des morilles de France |journal=Bulletin |
<ref name="Boudier 1897">{{cite journal |author=Boudier E. |year=1897 |title=Révision analytique des morilles de France |journal=Bulletin Trimestriel de la Société Mycologique de France |volume=13 |pages=130–150}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Boudier 1910">{{cite book |author=Boudier E. |year=1910 |title=Icones mycologicae ou iconographie des champignons de France principalement discomycètes avec texte descriptif |volume=2 |pages=194–421 |publisher=Librairie des Sciences Naturelles |location=Paris |language= |
<ref name="Boudier 1910">{{cite book |author=Boudier E. |year=1910 |title=Icones mycologicae ou iconographie des champignons de France principalement discomycètes avec texte descriptif |volume=2 |pages=194–421 |publisher=Librairie des Sciences Naturelles |location=Paris |language=fr}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Bunyard 1995">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Bunyard 1995">{{cite journal |vauthors=Bunyard BA, Nicholson MS, Royse DJ |year=1995 |title=Phylogenetic resolution of ''Morchella'', ''Verpa'', and''Disciotis'' (Pezizales: Morchellaceae) based on restriction enzyme analysis of the 28S ribosomal RNA gene |journal=Experimental Mycology |volume=19 |issue=3 |pages=223–233 |doi=10.1006/emyc.1995.1027 |pmid=7553270}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Burnett 1835">{{cite book |author=Burnett GT. |title=Outlines of Botany: Including a General History of the Vegetable Kingdom, in which Plants are Arranged According to the System of Natural Affinities |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HksaAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA241 |year=1835 |publisher=John Churchill |page=241}}</ref> |
<ref name="Burnett 1835">{{cite book |author=Burnett GT. |title=Outlines of Botany: Including a General History of the Vegetable Kingdom, in which Plants are Arranged According to the System of Natural Affinities |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HksaAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA241 |year=1835 |publisher=John Churchill |page=241}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Buscot 1992">{{cite book | |
<ref name="Buscot 1992">{{cite book |vauthors=Buscot F |year=1992 |chapter=Mycorrhizal succession and morel biology |veditors=Read DJ, Lewis DH, Fitter AH, Alexander IJ |title=Mycorrhizas in Ecosystems |location=Wallingford, United Kingdom |publisher=CAB International |pages=220–224 |isbn=978-0-85198-786-6}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Buscot 1987">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Buscot 1987">{{cite journal |vauthors=Buscot F, Roux J |year=1987 |title=Association between living roots and ascocarps of ''Morchella rotunda'' |journal=Transactions of the British Mycological Society |volume=89 |issue=2 |pages=249–252 |doi=10.1016/s0007-1536(87)80162-6}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Carluccio 2003">{{cite book |author=Carluccio A. |year=2003 |title=The Complete Mushroom Book |location=London, UK |publisher=Quadrille |pages=37–38, 96–97 |isbn=978-1-84400-040-1}}</ref> |
<ref name="Carluccio 2003">{{cite book |author=Carluccio A. |year=2003 |title=The Complete Mushroom Book |location=London, UK |publisher=Quadrille |pages=37–38, 96–97 |isbn=978-1-84400-040-1}}</ref> |
||
<ref name="Clowez 2012">{{cite journal |author=Clowez P. |title=Les morilles. Une nouvelle approche mondiale du genre ''Morchella'' |journal=Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France |year=2012 |volume=126 |issue=3–4 |pages=199–376 (see p. 238) |language= |
<ref name="Clowez 2012">{{cite journal |author=Clowez P. |title=Les morilles. Une nouvelle approche mondiale du genre ''Morchella'' |journal=Bulletin de la Société Mycologique de France |year=2012 |volume=126 |issue=3–4 |pages=199–376 (see p. 238) |language=fr}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Clowez 2014">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Clowez 2014">{{cite journal |vauthors=Clowez P, Alvarado P, Becerra M, Bilbao T, Moreau PA |year=2014 |title=''Morchella fluvialis'' sp. nov. (Ascomycota, Pezizales): A new but widespread morel in Spain |journal=Boletín de la Sociedad Micológica de Madrid |volume=38 |issue=2 |pages=251–260}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Cunningham 2012">{{cite book | |
<ref name="Cunningham 2012">{{cite book |vauthors=Cunningham AB, Yang X |title=Mushrooms in Forests and Woodlands: "Resource Management, Values and Local Livelihoods" |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=91usBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA180 |year=2012 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-53817-9 |page=180}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Dahlstrom 2000">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Dahlstrom 2000">{{cite journal |vauthors=Dahlstrom JL, Smith JE, Weber NS |title=Mycorrhiza-like interaction by ''Morchella'' with species of the Pinaceae in pure culture synthesis |journal=Mycorrhiza |volume=9 |issue=5 |pages=279–285 |year=2000 |doi=10.1007/PL00009992|bibcode=2000Mycor...9..279D |s2cid=36119264 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Du 2012">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Du 2012">{{cite journal |vauthors=Du XH, Zhao Q, Yang ZL, Hansen K, Taşkın H, Büyükalaca S, Dewsbury D, Moncalvo JM, Douhan GW, Robert VA, Crous PW, Rehner SA, Rooney AP, Sink S, O'Donnell K |year=2012 |title=How well do ITS rDNA sequences differentiate species of true morels (''Morchella'')? |journal=Mycologia |volume=104 |issue=6 |pages=1351–1368 |pmid=22802394 |doi=10.3852/12-056|s2cid=6740906 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Du 2012b">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Du 2012b">{{cite journal |vauthors=Du XH, Zhao Q, O'Donnell K, Rooney AP, Yang ZL |year=2012 |title=Multigene molecular phylogenetics reveals true morels (''Morchella'') are especially species-rich in China |journal=Fungal Genetics and Biology |doi=10.1016/j.fgb.2012.03.006 |pmid=22503770 |volume=49 |issue=6 |pages=455–469}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Du 2015">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Du 2015">{{cite journal |vauthors=Du XH, Zhao Q, Yang ZL |title=A review on research advances, issues, and perspectives of morels |journal=Mycology |year=2015 |volume=6 |issue=2 |pages=78–85 |doi=10.1080/21501203.2015.1016561|pmid=30151316 |pmc=6106076 }}</ref> {{open access}} |
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<ref name="Elliott 2014">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Elliott 2014">{{cite journal |vauthors=Elliott TF, Bougher NL, O'Donnell K, Trappe JM |title=''Morchella australiana'' sp. nov., an apparent Australian endemic from New South Wales and Victoria |journal=Mycologia |year=2014 |volume=106 |issue=1 |pages=113–118 |doi=10.3852/13-065 |pmid=24603835|s2cid=42830021 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Fries 1822">{{cite book |author=Fries EM. |year=1822 |title=Systema Mycologicum |volume=2 |location=Lundin, Sweden |publisher=Ex Officina Berlingiana |page=8 |url= |
<ref name="Fries 1822">{{cite book |author=Fries EM. |year=1822 |title=Systema Mycologicum |volume=2 |location=Lundin, Sweden |publisher=Ex Officina Berlingiana |page=8 |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/4335151}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Gray 1821">{{cite book |author=Gray SF. |year=1821 |title=A Natural Arrangement of British Plants, according to their relations to each other |volume=1 |page=662}}</ref> |
<ref name="Gray 1821">{{cite book |author=Gray SF. |year=1821 |title=A Natural Arrangement of British Plants, according to their relations to each other |volume=1 |page=662}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Green 2010">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Green 2010">{{cite journal |vauthors=Greene DF, Hesketh M, Pounden E |title=Emergence of morel (''Morchella'') and pixie cup (''Geopyxis carbonaria'') ascocarps in response to the intensity of forest floor combustion during a wildfire |journal=Mycologia |volume=102 |issue=4 |year=2010 |pages=766–773 |doi=10.3852/08-096 |pmid=20648745|s2cid=28400225 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Groves 1964">{{cite journal |author=Groves JW. |title=Poisoning by morels When taken with alcohol |journal=Mycologia |year=1964 |volume=56 |issue=5 |pages=779–780 |doi=10.2307/3756634}}</ref> |
<ref name="Groves 1964">{{cite journal |author=Groves JW. |title=Poisoning by morels When taken with alcohol |journal=Mycologia |year=1964 |volume=56 |issue=5 |pages=779–780 |doi=10.2307/3756634|jstor=3756634 }}</ref> |
||
<ref name="Hall 2003">{{cite book | |
<ref name="Hall 2003">{{cite book |vauthors=Hall IR, Buchanan PK |year=2003 |title=Edible and Poisonous Mushrooms of the World |publisher=Timber Press |isbn=978-0-88192-586-9}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Işiloğlu 2010">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Işiloğlu 2010">{{cite journal |vauthors=Işiloğlu M, Alli H, Spooner BM, Solak MH |year=2010 |title=''Morchella anatolica'' (Ascomycota), a new species from southwestern Anatolia, Turkey |journal=Mycologia |volume=102 |issue=2 |pages=455–468 |doi=10.3852/09-186 |pmid=20361512|s2cid=34185312 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Jacquetant 1985">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Jacquetant 1985">{{cite journal |vauthors=Jacquetant E, Bon M |year=1985 |title=Typifications et mises au point nomenclaturales dans l'ouvrage ''Les morilles'' (de E. Jacquetant), Nature-Piantanida 1984 |journal=Documents Mycologiques |volume=14 |page=1 |language=fr}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Kanwal 2010">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Kanwal 2010">{{cite journal |vauthors=Kanwal HK, Acharya K, Ramesh G, Reddy MS |title=Molecular characterization of ''Morchella'' species from the Western Himalayan region of India |journal=Current Microbiology |year=2010 |doi=10.1007/s00284-010-9849-1 |pmid=21188589 |volume=62 |issue=4 |pages=1245–1252|s2cid=1394087 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Karlson-Stiber 2003">{{cite journal | |
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<ref name="Krombholz 1834">Krombholz JV von. (1834). Naturgetreue Abblidungen und Beschreibungen der essbaren, schädlichen und verdächtigen Schwämme, Heift 3. G. Calve, Praha J, 36 p., pl. XV-XXII.</ref> |
<ref name="Krombholz 1834">Krombholz JV von. (1834). Naturgetreue Abblidungen und Beschreibungen der essbaren, schädlichen und verdächtigen Schwämme, Heift 3. G. Calve, Praha J, 36 p., pl. XV-XXII.</ref> |
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<ref name="Kuo 2005">{{cite book |author=Kuo M. |title=Morels |publisher=University of Michigan Press |location=Ann Arbor, Michigan |year=2005 |page=173 |isbn=978-0-472-03036-1}}</ref> |
<ref name="Kuo 2005">{{cite book |author=Kuo M. |title=Morels |publisher=University of Michigan Press |location=Ann Arbor, Michigan |year=2005 |page=173 |isbn=978-0-472-03036-1}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Kuo 2007">{{cite book |author=Kuo M. |title=100 Edible Mushrooms |publisher=The University of Michigan Press |location=Ann Arbor, Michigan |year=2007 |pages=55–58 |isbn=0-472-03126- |
<ref name="Kuo 2007">{{cite book |author=Kuo M. |title=100 Edible Mushrooms |publisher=The University of Michigan Press |location=Ann Arbor, Michigan |year=2007 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/100ediblemushroo00kuom/page/55 55–58] |isbn=978-0-472-03126-9 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/100ediblemushroo00kuom/page/55 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Kuo 2008">{{cite journal |author=Kuo M. |journal=Mycotaxon |volume=105 |pages=441–446 |year=2008 |title=''Morchella tomentosa'', a new species from western North America, and notes on ''M. rufobrunnea'' |url=http://www.mushroomexpert.com/Kuo_M_2008_Morchella_tomentosa.pdf}}</ref> |
<ref name="Kuo 2008">{{cite journal |author=Kuo M. |journal=Mycotaxon |volume=105 |pages=441–446 |year=2008 |title=''Morchella tomentosa'', a new species from western North America, and notes on ''M. rufobrunnea'' |url=http://www.mushroomexpert.com/Kuo_M_2008_Morchella_tomentosa.pdf}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Kuo 2012">{{cite journal | |
<ref name="Kuo 2012">{{cite journal |vauthors=Kuo M, Dewsbury DR, O'Donnell K, Carter MC, Rehner SA, Moore JD, Moncalvo JM, Canfield SA, Stephenson SL, Methven AS, Volk TJ |title=Taxonomic revision of true morels (''Morchella'') in Canada and the United States |journal=Mycologia |year=2012 |doi=10.3852/11-375 |pmid=22495449 |volume=104 |issue=5 |pages=1159–1177|s2cid=45219627 |url=http://thekeep.eiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1192&context=bio_fac }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Loizides 2011">{{cite journal |author=Loizides M. |year=2011 |title=''Morchella rufobrunnea'', η μορχέλλα της πόλης | |
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<ref name="Loizides 2015">{{cite journal |title=''Morchella tridentina'', ''M. rufobrunnea'', and ''M. kakiicolor'': a study of three poorly known Mediterranean morels, with nomenclatural updates in section ''Distantes'' | |
<ref name="Loizides 2015">{{cite journal |title=''Morchella tridentina'', ''M. rufobrunnea'', and ''M. kakiicolor'': a study of three poorly known Mediterranean morels, with nomenclatural updates in section ''Distantes'' |vauthors=Loizides M, Alvarado P, Clowez P, Moreau PA, de la Osa LR, Palazon A |journal=Mycological Progress |volume=14 |issue=13 |year=2015 |doi=10.1007/s11557-015-1030-6|bibcode=2015MycPr..14...13L |s2cid=16132175 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Loizides 2016">{{cite journal |vauthors=Loizides M, Bellanger JM, Lowez P, Richard F, Moreau PA |title=Combined phylogenetic and morphological studies of true morels (''Pezizales'', ''Ascomycota'') in Cyprus reveal significant diversity, including ''Morchella arbutiphila'' and ''M. disparilis'' spp. nov. |journal=Mycological Progress |volume=15 |issue=4 |page=39 |year=2016 |doi=10.1007/s11557-016-1180-1|bibcode=2016MycPr..15...39L |s2cid=15163613 }}</ref> |
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<ref name=mdcp>{{cite web | last = Kuo | first = M. |date=March 2006 | title = Morel Data Collection Project: Preliminary results | url = http://www.mushroomexpert.com/mdcp/ndex.html | |
<ref name=mdcp>{{cite web | last = Kuo | first = M. |date=March 2006 | title = Morel Data Collection Project: Preliminary results | url = http://www.mushroomexpert.com/mdcp/ndex.html | access-date = 2009-05-26}}</ref> |
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<ref name=kell05>{{cite journal| title=Species diversity within the ''Morchella esculenta'' group (Ascomycota: Morchellaceae) in Germany and France| journal=Organisms, Diversity & Evolution| volume=5| year=2005| pages=101–107| doi=10.1016/j.ode.2004.07.001| url=http://www.osiris.ufz.de/data/Kellner%202005%20Morchella%20Germany%20and%20France3634.pdf|author1=Harald Kellner |
<ref name=kell05>{{cite journal| title=Species diversity within the ''Morchella esculenta'' group (Ascomycota: Morchellaceae) in Germany and France| journal=Organisms, Diversity & Evolution| volume=5| year=2005| pages=101–107| doi=10.1016/j.ode.2004.07.001| url=http://www.osiris.ufz.de/data/Kellner%202005%20Morchella%20Germany%20and%20France3634.pdf| author1=Harald Kellner| author2=Carsten Renker| author3=François Buscot| name-list-style=amp| issue=2| bibcode=2005ODivE...5..101K| access-date=2011-03-15| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110719100855/http://www.osiris.ufz.de/data/Kellner%202005%20Morchella%20Germany%20and%20France3634.pdf| archive-date=2011-07-19| url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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<ref name=task10>{{cite journal| title=A multigene molecular phylogenetic assessment of true morels (''Morchella'') in Turkey| journal=Fungal Genetics and Biology| volume=47|date=Aug 2010| pages=672–682| doi=10.1016/j.fgb.2010.05.004 |
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<ref name=pnwrs>{{Cite book | last=Pilz | first=D. |author2=R. McLain |author3=S. Alexander |author4=L. Villarreal-Ruiz |author5=S. Berch |author6=T.L. Wurtz |author7=C.G. Parks |author8=E. McFarlane |author9=B. Baker |author10=R. Molina |author11=J.E. Smith | title= Ecology and management of morels harvested from the forests of western North America | url= http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/publications/gtr710/ | series= General Technical Report PNW-GTR-710 |date=March 2007 | publisher= U.S. Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station | location= Portland, OR}}</ref> |
<ref name=pnwrs>{{Cite book | last=Pilz | first=D. |author2=R. McLain |author3=S. Alexander |author4=L. Villarreal-Ruiz |author5=S. Berch |author6=T.L. Wurtz |author7=C.G. Parks |author8=E. McFarlane |author9=B. Baker |author10=R. Molina |author11=J.E. Smith | title= Ecology and management of morels harvested from the forests of western North America | url= http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/publications/gtr710/ | series= General Technical Report PNW-GTR-710 |date=March 2007 | publisher= U.S. Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station | location= Portland, OR}}</ref> |
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<ref name="urlFungorum synonymy: Morchella">{{cite web |title=''Morchella'' Dill. ex Pers. |url=http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/SynSpecies.asp?RecordID=3268 |publisher=Species Fungorum. CAB International | |
<ref name="urlFungorum synonymy: Morchella">{{cite web |title=''Morchella'' Dill. ex Pers. |url=http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/SynSpecies.asp?RecordID=3268 |publisher=Species Fungorum. CAB International |access-date=2014-12-11}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Taşkın2016">{{cite |
<ref name="Taşkın2016">{{cite journal |author=Taşkın, H. |author2=Doğan, H. |author3=Büyükalaca, S. |author4=Clowez, P. |author5=Moreau, P.-A. |author6=O'Donnell, K. |journal=Mycotaxon |volume=131 |issue=2 |pages=467–482 |year=2016 |title=Four new morel (''Morchella'') species in the elata subclade (M. sect. Distantes) from Turkey. |doi=10.5248/131.467 }}</ref> |
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<ref name="Loizides2017">{{cite web |title= Loizides, M. (2017). Morels: the story so far. Field Mycology '''18'''(2): 42–53.}}</ref> |
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<!-- Unused citation <ref name=mor1>{{cite journal| author=Ower, R., G. Mills, and J. Malachowski.| year=1986| title=Cultivation of Morchella |journal=U.S. Patent No. 4,594,809 }}</ref> --> |
<!-- Unused citation <ref name=mor1>{{cite journal| author=Ower, R., G. Mills, and J. Malachowski.| year=1986| title=Cultivation of Morchella |journal=U.S. Patent No. 4,594,809 }}</ref> --> |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{ |
{{Commons category}} |
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* [http://www.ascomycete.org/2000Pezizales/tabid/127/cid/10/language/en-US/Morchellaceae.aspx 2000 Pezizales] on Ascomycete.org |
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* {{IndexFungorum|3268}} |
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* [http://www.ascomycete.org/2000Pezizales/tabid/127/cid/10/language/en-US/Morchellaceae.aspx] |
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* [http://www.mushroomexpert.com/morels/index.html MushroomExpert.com's Morel section] |
* [http://www.mushroomexpert.com/morels/index.html MushroomExpert.com's Morel section] |
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* [http://www.fieldandstream.com/articles/hunting/2013/04/finding-cooking-morel-mushrooms A Beginner's Guide to Hunting Morel Mushrooms], from ''Field and Stream'' |
* [http://www.fieldandstream.com/articles/hunting/2013/04/finding-cooking-morel-mushrooms "A Beginner's Guide to Hunting Morel Mushrooms"], from ''Field and Stream'' |
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* [http://www.missfitting.com/colorado-morels Colorado Morels] |
* [http://www.missfitting.com/colorado-morels Colorado Morels] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201111235612/http://www.missfitting.com/colorado-morels |date=2020-11-11 }} |
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[[Category:Morchella| ]] |
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[[Category:Edible fungi|Morel]] |
[[Category:Edible fungi|Morel]] |
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[[Category:Pezizales genera]] |
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Latest revision as of 08:03, 13 December 2024
Morel | |
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A black morel in Poland | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Fungi |
Division: | Ascomycota |
Class: | Pezizomycetes |
Order: | Pezizales |
Family: | Morchellaceae |
Genus: | Morchella Dill. ex Pers. : Fr. (1794) |
Type species | |
Morchella esculenta | |
Species | |
~70 worldwide (see text) | |
Synonyms[1] | |
Morchella, the true morels, is a genus of edible sac fungi closely related to anatomically simpler cup fungi in the order Pezizales (division Ascomycota). These distinctive fungi have a honeycomb appearance due to the network of ridges with pits composing their caps. Morels are prized by gourmet cooks, particularly in Catalan and French cuisine, but can be toxic if consumed raw or undercooked. Due to difficulties in cultivation, commercial harvesting of wild morels has become a multimillion-dollar industry in the temperate Northern Hemisphere, in particular North America, Turkey, China, the Himalayas, India, and Pakistan where these highly prized fungi are found in abundance.
Typified by Morchella esculenta in 1794, the genus has been the source of considerable taxonomical controversy throughout the years, mostly with regard to the number of species involved, with some mycologists recognising as few as three species and others over thirty. Current molecular phylogenetics suggest there might be over seventy species of Morchella worldwide, most of them exhibiting high continental endemism and provincialism.
The genus is currently the focus of extensive phylogenetic, biogeographical, taxonomical and nomenclatural studies, and several new species have been described from Australia, Canada, Cyprus, Israel, Spain, and Turkey.
Description
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2023) |
Morels resemble a honeycomb due to the network of ridges with pits composing their caps. Morels have a convoluted head/cap, and are varied in shape and habitat.[2]
Similar species
[edit]When gathering morels for the table, care must be taken to distinguish them from the poisonous "false morels", a term loosely applied to describe Gyromitra esculenta, Verpa bohemica, and other morel lookalikes. Although false morels are sometimes eaten without ill effect, they can cause severe gastrointestinal upset, loss of muscular coordination (including cardiac muscle), or even death.[3][4] Incidents of poisoning usually occur when they are eaten in large quantities, inadequately cooked, or over several days in a row. False morels contain gyromitrin, an organic carcinogenic poison, hydrolyzed in the body into monomethylhydrazine (MMH).[5] Gyromitra esculenta in particular, has been reported to be responsible for up to 23% of mushroom fatalities each year in Poland.[6]
The key morphological features distinguishing false morels from true morels are as follows:
- Gyromitra species often have a "wrinkled" or "cerebral" (brain-like) appearance to the cap due to multiple wrinkles and folds, rather than the honeycomb appearance of true morels due to ridges and pits.
- Gyromitra esculenta has a cap that is usually reddish-brown in colour, but sometimes also chestnut, purplish-brown, or dark brown.
- Gyromitra species are typically chambered in longitudinal section, while Verpa species contain a cottony substance inside their stem, in contrast to true morels which are always hollow.
- The caps of Verpa species (V. bohemica, V. conica and others) are attached to the stem only at the apex (top of the cap), unlike true morels which have caps that are attached to the stem at, or near the base of the cap. The easiest way to distinguish Verpa species from Morchella species is to slice them longitudinally.[7][8]
Taxonomy
[edit]The fruit bodies of Morchella species are highly polymorphic, varying in shape, color, and size. While in many cases they do not exhibit clear-cut distinguishing features microscopically, this has historically contributed to uncertainties in taxonomy.[9][10][11][12] Discriminating between the various taxa described is further hindered by uncertainty over which of these are truly biologically distinct. Remarkably, some authors in the past had suggested that the genus contains as few as 3 to 6 species,[13][14][15][16][17] while others recognised as many as 34.[18][19][20] Efforts to clarify the situation and re-evaluate old classical names (such as Morchella elata and others) in accordance to current phylogenetic data have been challenging, due to vague or ambiguous original descriptions and loss of holotype material.[21][22] In 2012, the simultaneous description of several new taxa from Europe by Clowez[20] and North America by Kuo and colleagues[23] resulted in several synonymities further complicating matters, until a transatlantic study by Richard and colleagues resolved many of these issues in 2014.[21] The genus is currently undergoing extensive re-evaluation with regard to the taxonomic status of several species.
Early taxonomic history
[edit]Morchella Dill. ex Pers. : Fr. was typified by Christiaan Hendrik Persoon in 1794,[24] with Morchella esculenta designated as the type species for the genus. Among early pioneers who took an interest in the genus, were mycologists Julius Vincenz von Krombholz and Émile Boudier, who, in 1834[25] and 1897[18] respectively, published several species and varieties, accompanied by meticulously illustrated iconographic plates. The seminal taxon Morchella elata, whose true identity still remains unresolved,[21][12] was described by Elias Fries in 1822, from a fir forest in Sweden.[26] Other classical, early-proposed names include Morchella deliciosa, also described by Fries in 1822, Morchella semilibera, the half-free morel, originally described by de Candolle and sanctioned by Fries in 1822,[26] Morchella vulgaris, which was recombined by Samuel Gray as a distinct species in 1821[27] following a forma of M. esculenta previously proposed by Persoon, and Morchella angusticeps, a large-spored species described by American mycologist Charles Peck in 1887.[28] Morchella purpurascens, the purple morel, was first described by Boudier as a variety of M. elata in 1897 based on an 1834 plate by Krombholz, and was recombined as a distinct species in 1985 by Emile Jacquetant.[19][29] Morchella eximia, a globally-occurring fire-associated species was also described by Boudier in 1910.[30] The old, widely applied name Morchella conica,[31] featuring in many field guides and literature across several countries, has been shown by Richard and colleagues to be illegitimate.[21]
Classification
[edit]About 80 species of Morchella were described until the turn of the 21st century (per the Index Fungorum), a number of which were later shown to be illegitimate or synonyms.[21] As molecular tools became widely available in the new millennium, a revived interest in the genus commenced and several new species were proposed. In 2008 Kuo described Morchella tomentosa from burned coniferous forests in western North America.[32] In 2010 Işiloğlu and colleagues described Morchella anatolica,[33] a basal species from Turkey later shown to be sister to Morchella rufobrunnea. A study by Clowez described over 20 new species in 2012,[20] while later in the same year, another study by Kuo and colleagues described 19 species from North America.[23] However, several of these newly proposed names later turned out to be synonyms.[21] An extensive taxonomical and nomenclatural revision of the genus provided by Richard and colleagues in 2014, applied names to 30 of the genealogical lineages recognized so far and clarified several synonymities.[21] Also in 2014, Elliott and colleagues described Morchella australiana from sclerophyll forests in Australia,[34] while Clowez and colleagues described Morchella fluvialis from riparian forests in Spain.[35]
In 2015, Loizides and colleagues clarified the taxonomy of Morchella tridentina, a cosmopolitan species described under many names, and recombined Morchella kakiicolor as a distinct species.[22] Later in the same year, Clowez and colleagues described Morchella palazonii from Spain,[36] while Voitk and colleagues described Morchella laurentiana from Canada and Morchella eohespera, a cosmopolitan species present in several continents.[37] In an extensive phylogenetic and morphological study from Cyprus in 2016, Loizides and colleagues added two more Mediterranean species, Morchella arbutiphila and Morchella disparilis, and resurrected Morchella dunensis as an autonomous species.[38] In the same year, Taşkın and colleagues described four of the previously unnamed phylospecies from Turkey: Morchella conifericola, Morchella feekensis, Morchella magnispora and Morchella mediteterraneensis.[39]
Section Rufobrunnea
[edit]Section Morchella
[edit]- Morchella americana
- Morchella castaneae
- Morchella diminutiva
- Morchella dunensis
- Morchella esculenta
- synonyms: Morchella pseudoumbrina, Morchella pseudoviridis
- Morchella fluvialis
- Morchella galilaea
- Morchella palazonii
- Morchella prava
- Morchella sceptriformis
- synonym: Morchella virginiana
- Morchella steppicola
- Morchella ulmaria
- synonym: Morchella cryptica
- Morchella vulgaris
Section Distantes
[edit]- Morchella angusticeps
- Morchella arbutiphila
- Morchella australiana
- Morchella brunnea
- Morchella conifericola
- Morchella deliciosa
- synonym: Morchella conica
- Morchella disparilis
- Morchella dunalii
- synonym: Morchella fallax
- Morchella elata
- Morchella eohespera
- Morchella eximia
- Morchella eximioides
- Morchella exuberans
- synonym: Morchella capitata
- Morchella feekensis
- Morchella iberica[40]
- Morchella importuna
- Morchella kakiicolor
- Morchella laurentiana
- Morchella magnispora
- Morchella mediterraneensis
- Morchella populiphila
- Morchella pulchella
- Morchella punctipes
- Morchella purpurascens
- Morchella semilibera
- synonyms: Morchella gigas, Morchella gigas var. tintinnabulum, Morchella hybrida, Morchella undosa, Morchella varisiensis, Morchella esculenta var. crassipes, Phallus gigas, Eromitra gigas, Phallus undosus, Phallus crassipes, Mitrophora hybrida, Mitrophora hybrida var. crassipes, Ptychoverpa gigas, Helvella hybrida
- Morchella septentrionalis
- Morchella sextelata
- Morchella snyderi
- Morchella tomentosa
- Morchella tridentina
Unresolved classification
[edit]- Morchella anteridiformis
- Morchella apicata
- Morchella bicostata
- Morchella conicopapyracea
- Morchella crassipes
- Morchella deqinensis
- Morchella distans
- Morchella guatemalensis
- Morchella herediana
- Morchella hetieri
- Morchella hortensis
- Morchella hotsonii
- Morchella hungarica
- Morchella inamoena
- Morchella intermedia
- Morchella meiliensis
- Morchella miyabeana
- Morchella neuwirthii
- Morchella norvegiensis
- Morchella patagonica
- Morchella patula
- Morchella pragensis
- Morchella procera
- Morchella pseudovulgaris
- Morchella rielana
- Morchella rigida
- Morchella rigidoides
- Morchella smithiana
- Morchella sulcata
- Morchella tasmanica
- Morchella tatari
- Morchella tibetica
- Morchella umbrina
- Morchella umbrinovelutipes
- Morchella vaporaria
Phylogeny
[edit]Early phylogenetic analyses supported the hypothesis that the genus comprises only a few species with considerable phenotypic variation.[41][42][43] Subsequent multigenic DNA studies, however, have revealed more than a dozen genealogically distinct species in North America and at least as many in Europe.[44][45][46][21] DNA studies revealed three discrete clades, or genetic groups, consisting of the "white morels" (Morchella rufobrunnea and M. anatolica), the "yellow morels" (M. esculenta and others), and the "black morels" (M. elata and others).[45] The fire-associated species Morchella tomentosa, commonly known as the "gray morel", is distinct for its fine hairs on the cap ridges and sclerotia-like underground structures, and may also deserve its own clade based on DNA evidence.[47][32][48] Within the yellow and black clades, there are dozens of distinct species, many endemic to individual continents or regions.[45] This species-rich view is supported by studies in Western Europe,[49] Turkey,[50] Cyprus,[38] Israel,[51] China,[52] Patagonia,[53] and the Himalayas.[54]
Early ancestral reconstruction tests by O'Donnell and collaborators postulated a western North American origin of morels and the genus was estimated to have diverged from its closest genealogical relatives Verpa and Disciotis in the early Cretaceous, approximately 129 million years ago (Mya).[45] This date was later revised by Du and collaborators, placing the divergence of the genus in the late Jurassic, approximately 154 Mya.[52] However, neither of these reconstructions had included Morchella anatolica in the analyses, whose phylogenetic placement remained at the time unresolved. Following genetic testing of isotype collection of M. anatolica by Taşkın and colleagues, this species was shown to nest in the ancestral /Rufobrunnea clade, together with the transcontinental M. rufobrunnea.[46] This cast doubts over the accuracy of the original reconstructions, since both species of the ancestral /Rufobrunnea clade are present in the Mediterranean, while M. anatolica is altogether absent from North America.[22][38] Updated ancestral area reconstructions by Loizides and colleagues using an expanded 79-species data set, have in 2021 refuted the previous hypothesis and designated the Mediterranean basin as the most probable place of origin of morels.[55]
Distribution and habitat
[edit]Morels can be found in the temperate Northern Hemisphere, in particular North America, Turkey, China, the Himalayas, India, and Pakistan.[citation needed]
Yellow morels (Morchella esculenta and related species) are more commonly found under deciduous trees rather than conifers, while black morels (M. elata and related species) are mostly found in coniferous forests, disturbed ground and recently burned areas.[20][38][56][57] Morchella galilaea,[58] and occasionally M. rufobrunnea,[51][59][22] appear to fruit in the autumn or winter months rather than spring, which is the typical fruiting season for morels. In the American Pacific Northwest, they can be found from April to August.[60]
Efforts to cultivate morels at a large scale have rarely been successful and the commercial morel industry relies on the harvest of wild mushrooms.[61]
Transcontinental species
[edit]Although many species within Morchella exhibit continental endemism and provincialism,[45] several species have been phylogenetically shown to be present in more than one continent. So far, the list of transcontinental species includes M. americana, M. eohespera, M. eximia, M. exuberans, M. galilaea, M. importuna, M. populiphila, M. pulchella, M. rufobrunnea, M. semilibera, M. sextelata, M. steppicola, and M. tridentina.[52][21][38][12] The reasons behind the widespread, cosmopolitan distribution of these species, are still puzzling. Some authors have hypothesized that such transcontinental occurrences are the result of accidental anthropogenic introductions,[50][45] but this view has been disputed by others, who suggested an old and natural distribution, at least for some of these species which appear to be linked to indigenous flora.[22][38][55] Long-distance spore dispersal has also been suggested as a possible dispersal mechanism for some species, especially those belonging to fire-adapted lineages.[62] It has been suggested that the widespread but disjunct distribution of some morel species, especially early diverging lineages like M. rufobrunnea and M. tridentina, may be the result of climatic refugia from the Quaternary glaciation.[55]
Ecology
[edit]The ecology of Morchella species is not well understood. Many species appear to form symbiotic or endophytic relationships with trees,[63][64][65][66] while others appear to act as saprotrophs.[47][65]
Tree species associated with Morchella vary greatly depending on the individual species, continent, or region. Trees commonly associated with morels in Europe and across the Mediterranean include Abies (fir), Pinus (pine), Populus (poplar), Ulmus (elm), Quercus (oak), Arbutus (strawberry trees), Castanea (chestnut), Alnus (alder), Olea (olive trees), Malus (apple trees), and Fraxinus (ash).[20][38][22][46][55] In western North America morels are often found in coniferous forests, including species of Pinus (pine), Abies (fir), Larix (larch), and Pseudotsuga (Douglas-fir), as well as in Populus (cottonwood) riparian forests.[61][23] Deciduous trees commonly associated with morels in the northern hemisphere include Fraxinus (ash), Platanus (sycamore), Liriodendron (tulip tree), dead and dying elms, cottonwoods, and old apple trees (remnants of orchards).[23] Due to their springtime phenology (March–May), morels are hardly ever found in the vicinity of common poisonous mushrooms such as the death cap (Amanita phalloides), the sulphur tuft (Hypholoma fasciculare), or the fly agaric (Amanita muscaria).[67] They can, however, occur alongside false morels (Gyromitra and Verpa species) and elfin saddles (Helvella species), which also appear in spring.
Association with wildfire
[edit]Certain Morchella species (M. eximia, M. importuna, M. tomentosa and others) exhibit a pyrophilic behaviour and may grow abundantly in forests which have been recently burned by a fire.[68][69] Moderate-intensity fires are reported to produce higher abundances of morels than low- or high-intensity fires.[48] This is caused by the soil becoming more alkaline as the result of wood ash combining with water and being absorbed into the soil which triggers the morels to fruit. Alkaline soil conditions which trigger fruiting have been observed and exploited with small-scale commercial cultivation of morels.[70][47][68] Where fire suppression is practiced, morels often grow in small numbers in the same spot, year after year. If these areas are overrun by wildfire they often produce a bumper crop of black morels the following spring. Commercial pickers and buyers in North America target recently burned areas for this reason. These spots may be closely guarded by mushroom pickers, as morels are widely regarded as a delicacy and often a cash crop.[61]
Cultivation
[edit]Due to the mushroom's prized fruit bodies, several attempts have been made to grow the fungus in culture. In 1901, Repin reported successfully obtaining fruit bodies in a cave in which cultures had been established in flower pots nine years previously in 1892.[71]
More recently, small-scale commercial growers have had success growing morels by using partially shaded rows of mulched wood. The rows of mulch piles are inoculated with morel mushroom spores in a solution of water and molasses which are poured over the piles of mulch and then they are allowed to grow undisturbed for several weeks. A solution of wood ashes mixed in water and diluted is subsequently poured over the rows of wood mulch which triggers fruiting of the morels. Morels are known to appear after fires and the alkalinity produced by wood ash mixed with water initiate fruit body formation for most species of morels.[70]
In 2021 it was announced that indoor cultivation of black morels had been successfully achieved after decades of research and experimentation with methods by The Danish Morel Project. The project has been able to cultivate 20 lbs of morels per square yard or around 10 kg per square metre with cost estimates expected to be similar to producing white button mushrooms (Agaricus bisporus). Previous attempts at cultivation had managed to produce sclerotia but encountered issues in getting them to reliably fruit. One of the breakthroughs with this project was growing them in a climate controlled environment in conjunction with grass which is involved in stimulating fruiting in the morel mycelium. Cultivation in this manner has been noted to produce superior morels for culinary uses since they can be assured to be insect, slug and dirt free and therefore do not need to be washed and cleaned like foraged morels. Since washing morels can negatively impact the texture, reliable cultivation may result in more versatility with this ingredient in the kitchen as well as making the delicacy more affordable and accessible.[72][73]
Toxicity
[edit]The consumption of Morchella species can have adverse effects. In 2023, a Montana sushi restaurant serving them was linked to 51 people who experienced gastrointestinal illness, with two reported deaths and three other hospitalizations.[74][75] The consumption of raw morels in particular is advised against.[76] An unknown toxin[77] can be neutralized via cooking.[76] Additionally, cooked morels can reportedly cause symptoms of upset stomach when consumed with alcohol.[78]
When eating this fungus for the first time, it is advised to consume a small amount to minimize any allergic reaction. As with all fungi, morels for consumption must be clean and free of decay. Morels growing in old apple orchards previously treated with the deprecated insecticide lead arsenate may accumulate levels of toxic lead and arsenic that are unsuitable for human consumption.[79]
Uses
[edit]Morels, "almost universally associated with spring," can be found in many habitats. Morel may be more likely to fruit during a period of increasing heat following a chilly period, a preference which is credited for their abundance in areas with cold winters.[80]
Black morels (Morchella elata) are often found on land that has been disturbed by logging burning.[80]
Nutrition
[edit]Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Energy | 129 kJ (31 kcal) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
5.1 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sugars | 0.6 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dietary fiber | 2.8 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0.57 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3.12 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other constituents | Quantity | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Water | 90 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
†Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[81] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[82] |
Raw morel mushrooms are 90% water, 5% carbohydrates, 3% protein, and 1% fat. A 100 gram reference amount supplies 31 calories, and is a rich source of iron (94% of the Daily Value, DV), manganese, phosphorus, zinc, and vitamin D (34% DV, if having been exposed to sunlight or artificial ultraviolet light). Raw morels contain moderate levels of several B vitamins (table).
Gastronomical value and culinary uses
[edit]They have been called "prized delicacies...they are so esteemed in Europe that people used to set fire to their own forests in hopes of eliciting a bountiful morel crop the next spring!"[80]
Morels are a feature of many cuisines, including Provençal.[83] Their flavor is prized by chefs worldwide, with recipes and preparation methods designed to highlight and preserve it.[84] As with most edible fungi, they are best when collected or bought fresh. They are sometimes added to meat and poultry dishes and soups, and can be used as pasta fillings.[85] As morels are known to contain thermolabile toxins, they must always be cooked before eating.
Morels can be preserved in several ways: They can be 'flash frozen' by simply running under cold water or putting them in a bucket to soak for a few minutes, then spread on a baking tray and placed into a freezer. After freezing, they keep very well with the frozen glaze for a long time in airtight containers. However, when thawed they can sometimes turn slightly mushy, so they are best frozen after steaming or frying. Due to their natural porosity, morels may contain trace amounts of soil which cannot be easily washed out. Any visible soil should be removed with a brush, after cutting the body in half lengthwise, if needed. Mushroom hunters sometimes recommend soaking morels in a bowl of salt water briefly prior to cooking, although many chefs would disagree.[86]
Drying is a popular and effective method for long-term storage, and morels are widely available commercially in this form. Any insect larvae which might be present in the fruit bodies usually drop out during the drying process.[87] Dried morels can then be reconstituted by soaking for 10–20 minutes in warm water or milk, and the soaking liquid can be used as stock.[88]
The flavor of morels is not just appreciated by humans; in Yellowstone National Park, black morels are also known to be consumed by grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis).[89]
In popular culture
[edit]Morel hunting is a common springtime activity. Mushroom collectors may carry a mesh collecting bag, so the spores can scatter as one carries the harvest.[86]
Every spring, hundreds of morel enthusiasts gather in Boyne City, Michigan for the National Morel Mushroom Festival, a century-old event.[90] As one observer stated, "if there is a modern, North American reenactment of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales this is it."[8] Other festivals and hunting competitions in North America include the Illinois State Morel Mushroom Hunting Championship, the Ottawa Midwest Morel Fest and the Mesick Michigan Mushroom Festival.[91]
Vernacular names
[edit]Morchella species have been called by many local names; some of the more colorful include dryland fish, because when sliced lengthwise then breaded and fried, their outline resembles the shape of a fish;[92] hickory chickens, as they are known in many parts of Kentucky; and merkels or miracles, based on folklore, of how a mountain family was saved from starvation by eating morels. In parts of West Virginia, they are known as molly moochers, muggins, or muggles. Due to the partial structural and textural similarity to some species of Porifera (sponges), other common names for any true morel are sponge mushroom and waffle mushroom. In the Appalachian woodlands, morels have also been called haystacks, or snakeheads.[86] The Finnish vernacular name huhtasieni, refers to huhta, area cleared for agriculture by the slash and burn method.[93]
The scientific name of the genus Morchella itself, is thought to have derived from morchel,[94] an old German word close to "Möhre", carrot or beet, due to similarity in shape.
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Yellow morels in France
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Black morels in British Columbia, Canada
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Morel in a house garden in Ben Shemen, Israel
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Morchella Dill. ex Pers". Species Fungorum. CAB International. Retrieved 2014-12-11.
- ^ "Cup fungus | Edible, Spore Dispersal & Saprobes | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-05-01.
- ^ Michelot D, Toth B (1991). "Poisoning by Gyromitra esculenta—a review". Journal of Applied Toxicology. 11 (4): 235–243. doi:10.1002/jat.2550110403. PMID 1939997. S2CID 7994829.
- ^ Bresinsky A, Besl H. (1990). A colour atlas of poisonous fungi. Wolfe Publishing Ltd, London.
- ^ Karlson-Stiber C, Persson H (2003). "Cytotoxic fungi—an overview". Toxicon. 42 (4): 339–349. Bibcode:2003Txcn...42..339K. doi:10.1016/S0041-0101(03)00238-1. PMID 14505933.
- ^ Lampe KF. (1979). "Toxic fungi". Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology. 19 (1): 85–104. doi:10.1146/annurev.pa.19.040179.000505. PMID 378111.
- ^ Kuo M. (2007). 100 Edible Mushrooms. Ann Arbor, Michigan: The University of Michigan Press. pp. 55–58. ISBN 978-0-472-03126-9.
- ^ a b Kuo M. (2005). Morels. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. p. 173. ISBN 978-0-472-03036-1.
- ^ Kimbrough JW. (1970). "Current trends in the classification of discomycetes". Botanical Review. 36 (2): 91–161. Bibcode:1970BotRv..36...91K. doi:10.1007/bf02858958. S2CID 11463562.
- ^ Korf RP. (1972). "Synoptic key to the genera of the Pezizales". Mycologia. 64 (5): 937–994. doi:10.2307/3758070. JSTOR 3758070.
- ^ Masaphy S, Zabari L, Goldberg D, Jander-Shagug G (Spring 2010). "The complexity of Morchella systematics: A case of the yellow morel from Israel" (PDF). Fungi Magazine. 3 (2): 14–18.
- ^ a b c Loizides, M. (2017). "Morels: the story so far". Field Mycology. 18 (2): 42–53. doi:10.1016/j.fldmyc.2017.04.004.
- ^ Overholts LO. (1934). "The morels of Pennsylvania". Proceedings of the Pennsylvania Academy of Science. 8: 108–114.
- ^ Seaver FJ. (1942). The North American cup-fungi (Operculates). Hafner Publishing C. New York. 377 p.
- ^ Dennis RWG. (1978). Bristish Ascomycètes. Ed. Cramer, Vaduz, 585 p.
- ^ Breitenbach J, Kränzlin F. (1984). Fungi of Switzerland, Volume 1: Ascomycetes. Verlag Mykologia, Luzern, Switzerland. 314 p.
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External links
[edit]- 2000 Pezizales on Ascomycete.org
- MushroomExpert.com's Morel section
- "A Beginner's Guide to Hunting Morel Mushrooms", from Field and Stream
- Colorado Morels Archived 2020-11-11 at the Wayback Machine