In 1882, Peck described this species as "Subglobose, four to six inches in diameter, the radicating base somewhat pointed, the external peridium thin, smooth, whitish, the upper part cracking into small angular persistent spot-like scales or areas, the inner peridium thick, sub corky, somewhat brittle, the upper part at length breaking up into irregular fragments; capillitium and spores ochraceous-brown, the filaments long, flexuous, somewhat branched, .0003 of an inch spores subglobose or broadly elliptical, .0002-.00025 of an inch long. Arizona, June. Pringle. This is a singular species of
Lycoperdon, belonging to the section
Bovistoides, but having the peridium of unusual thickness. It is also apparently destitute of any cellular base, in which respect it approaches the genus
Bovista, but the character of the threads of the capillitium points to
Lycoperdon as its proper genus."
Size, shape, and color The thick-skinned puffball sometimes known as
Calvatia pachyderma is a mid-size puffball, with specimens usually measuring between in diameter with a "very thick" outer wall. This puffball is not always spherical and tends to be wider than taller, and is sometimes shaped like a
turnip, with tiny "rootlets" (actually
mycelium) connecting it to the substrate. Initially white or whitish, as it expands it can become various shades of gray or brown and develop a texture described as "scaly or more often like cracked mud." As it moves past the edible stage toward the inedible spore-dispersing brown-dust explosion stage, the exterior skin (
peridium) may begin to spontaneously peel back, sometimes ultimately fracturing in a way that superficially resembles an
earthstar and that may leave behind a "shallow cup-shaped base".
Peridium and gleba The "skin" of a puffball is called the
peridium; the "flesh" is called the
gleba. One review of North American
gasteromycetes described
C. pachyderma as having "Peridium single, or at least not separable into two distinct layers, thick; gleba bright olivaceous."
Spores The spores of this fungus are described as
ochraceous-brown or "soft, yellowish, golden brown to dark olive-brown". They appear "entirely smooth" when viewed under a
microscope.
Similar species It can resemble
Mycenastrum corium and
Scleroderma polyrhizum. == Habitat and distribution ==