The
gleba is white when young and has a cheesy appearance and consistency. As the puffball matures, it undergoes a lytic process involving water loss. Subsequently, the gleba becomes
olivaceous, olive-brown, and finally, dark olive when dry, and then develops a characteristic pungent smell. sometimes plicate (crumpled, wrinkled) around a somewhat fibrous, persistent tuft of
mycelium. The puffball is initially covered by a thick, felted, whitish layer (the exo
peridium). This is continuous at first but eventually cracks and peels away in thin flakes, exposing a leathery to corky, nearly smooth, light brown to dark pinkish-brown surface. This tough layer of tissue (the endoperidium) measures about 2 mm thick and encloses the gleba. In maturity, the endoperidium opens by irregular splits that eventually extend towards the base in a star-shaped manner. These torn segments of endoperidium sometimes turn inside out, sometimes drying rigid, exposing a felt-like internal surface. Fruit bodies that grow underground have a conspicuously different
morphology–a smooth, chocolate-brown coloured surface that lacks the patches characteristic of above-ground fruit bodies, and their
capillitia are
bifurcate with stumpy spines. The odor and taste of the species have been described as pungent or earthy and its taste astringent. Its spores are spherical, measuring 8–13
μm, and have a surface of irregular, coarse warts. The capillitia comprise late-maturing, thick-walled cells in the gleba. The main axes of these branched cells are 20–30 μm thick, and they are covered with numerous spines.
Mycenastrum corium subsp.
ferrugineum has a deep rusty red to reddish orange gleba, clearly distinguishing it from the glebal coloring of the main subspecies.
M. corium var.
diabolicum has an extremely spiny capillitium.
Puffball maturation The manner in which the puffball splits open (
dehisces) has been described by 19th-century American mycologist
William Henry Long. The thick and leathery peridium of the mature puffball remains unopened for several months without splitting. After several alternating cycles of wetting and drying, fissures develop across the top. These fissures usually radiate from a common center near the top of the fruit body and finally produce very irregular star-like teeth. In time, the entire upper half of the puffball is open and exposed during dry weather. In this condition, the spores are blown out by the wind and widely distributed. During every rainy spell, the puffball promptly closes only to open again when dry weather returns. At each alternate opening and closing the peridium is split more and more, until finally it is expanded into a flat shape, or even curls backward. In the puffball, the outer layer of the peridium comprises cells arranged so that when wet they adsorb water and expand, thus closing the top of the puffball. Upon drying, these outer cells lose water and gradually shrink, thus producing an unequal tension between the outer and inner cells of the peridium. This tension causes the irregular star-like pieces of the peridium to gradually separate and curve outward, thus opening the top of the puffball during dry weather. ==Distribution, habitat, and ecology==