showing the spines The fruit bodies of
Hydnellum ferrugineum are more or less top-shaped with
caps that are in diameter. They are at first convex, then pulvinate (cushion-shaped), later flattening or becoming slightly depressed in the center. The cap surface of young fruit bodies is uneven, with a velvety to felted texture, and a whitish to pink color. It sometimes exudes blood-red drops of fluid in the depressions. The surface later becomes flesh-colored to dark reddish brown, but with wavy margin remaining whitish. The lower surface of the fruit body bears the
hymenium, the fertile
spore-bearing tissue. It comprises a dense arrangement of white to reddish brown spines up to 6 mm long, hanging vertically downwards. The stout
stipe measures long by thick, and is the same color as the cap. The fungus employs an indeterminate growth pattern, in which the fruit body formation begins from a vertical column of hyphae that eventually expand at the top to form the cap. Any solid objects encountered during growth, such as grass or twigs, can be enveloped by the expanding fruit body. Similarly, closely neighboring caps can fuse together during growth. The broadly
ellipsoid to roughly spherical
spores are 5.5–7.5 by 4.5–5.5
μm. Their surfaces are covered with small rounded bumps. The
basidia (spore-bearing cells) are narrowly club-shaped, four-spored, and measure 25–30 by 6–7.5 μm. The hyphae of the flesh are brownish with thin walls, and measure 4–6 μm; hyphae in the spines are thin-walled,
septate, and sometimes branched, measuring 3.5–4.5 μm. The hyphae do not have
clamp connections.
Similar species Hydnellum peckii is similar in appearance, but has an acrid taste, and clamp connections in its hyphae.
Hydnellum spongiosipes is readily confused with
H. ferrugineum, and several authors have historically considered the two species to be the same;
molecular studies, however, indicate that the two fungi are closely related, but distinct. In contrast with
H. ferrugineum,
H. spongiosipes has a darker cap when young, darker flesh, and occurs in deciduous woods. Old fruit bodies of
H. ferrugineum can be confused with those of
Hydnellum concrescens. ==Habitat and distribution==