Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Eastern Jack-o'-Lantern Mushroom

Eastern Jack-o'-Lantern Mushroom

Omphalotus illudens

The Eastern Jack-o'-Lantern Mushroom (Omphalotus illudens) is a strikingly orange, bioluminescent fungus native to eastern North America. Named for its vivid pumpkin-like coloration and its eerie greenish glow in the dark, this mushroom is one of the most commonly misidentified fungi in North America — frequently confused with edible chanterelles (Cantharellus spp.) by foragers.

• Belongs to the genus Omphalotus, which contains several bioluminescent species found worldwide
• The species epithet "illudens" means "deceiving" in Latin, a reference to its dangerous resemblance to edible chanterelles
• Produces a distinctive green bioluminescence from its gills, visible in complete darkness
• One of the few fungi whose glow is bright enough to be perceived by the human eye without instrumentation

Omphalotus illudens is native to eastern North America, where it is widely distributed from southeastern Canada through the eastern United States.

• Range extends from Ontario and Quebec southward to Florida, and westward to the Great Plains
• Most commonly encountered in deciduous forests of the Appalachian region and the eastern seaboard
• The genus Omphalotus has a global distribution, with closely related species including O. olearius (Europe), O. japonicus (East Asia), and O. nidiformis (Australia)
• Phylogenetic studies place Omphalotaceae within the order Agaricales, a large and diverse group of gilled mushrooms
• The family Omphalotaceae was separated from Marasmiaceae based on molecular phylogenetic analyses in the early 2000s
The Eastern Jack-o'-Lantern Mushroom is a large, fleshy, saprotrophic or weakly parasitic agaric (gilled mushroom) with distinctive morphological features:

Cap (Pileus):
• 5–20 cm in diameter, convex when young, becoming flat to funnel-shaped with age
• Surface smooth to slightly fibrillose, bright orange to orange-yellow, sometimes with brownish tones toward the center
• Margin often wavy or lobed, especially in mature specimens
• Flesh is thin, tough, and orange-colored

Gills (Lamellae):
• True, blade-like gills (unlike the blunt ridges of chanterelles) — a key identification feature
• Decurrent (running down the stem), closely spaced, bright orange to orange-yellow
• Source of the mushroom's bioluminescence — emit a visible green glow in darkness

Stipe (Stem):
• 4–15 cm long, 1–2.5 cm thick, central to slightly off-center
• Solid, firm, orange-colored, often tapering toward the base
• No ring (annulus) or volva present

Spores:
• White spore print (distinguishing it from chanterelles, which have pale yellow to cream prints)
• Spores are smooth, ellipsoid, approximately 5–7 × 3.5–5 μm
• Basidiospores are inamyloid (do not stain blue in iodine)

Fruiting Bodies:
• Typically appear in large, dense clusters (cespitose) at the base of trees or on buried wood
• Individual fruiting bodies may number from a few to several dozen in a single cluster
Omphalotus illudens is a saprotrophic and facultatively parasitic fungus that plays an important ecological role in wood decomposition.

Habitat:
• Found at the base of hardwood trees, on stumps, or on buried wood
• Particularly associated with oaks (Quercus spp.), but also found on other hardwoods and occasionally conifers
• Fruiting season: late summer through autumn (typically July to November in North America)
• Prefers moist, shaded forest environments

Ecological Role:
• Causes white rot in heartwood of living and dead trees, breaking down lignin and cellulose
• As a weak parasite, it can infect living trees through wounds, eventually contributing to structural weakening
• The bioluminescence of the gills is hypothesized to attract insects that may aid in spore dispersal, though this hypothesis remains under investigation

Bioluminescence:
• The green glow (peak emission ~530 nm) is produced by a luciferin-luciferase reaction
• The compound involved is hispidin-derived — specifically, the fungal luciferin 3-hydroxyhispidin
• Light emission is continuous (not flashing) and most intense in the gills and spore-producing surfaces
• Bioluminescence is brightest in fresh, actively growing specimens and diminishes as the mushroom dries
The Eastern Jack-o'-Lantern Mushroom is POISONOUS and should never be consumed.

Toxic Compounds:
• Contains illudin S and illudin M — sesquiterpene compounds responsible for severe gastrointestinal toxicity
• These compounds are among the most potent natural cytotoxins known

Symptoms of Poisoning:
• Onset typically within 1–3 hours of ingestion
• Severe nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal cramps
• Symptoms usually resolve within 24–48 hours but can be intensely debilitating
• No known fatalities in healthy adults, but dehydration from prolonged vomiting and diarrhea can be dangerous, particularly in children and the elderly

Misidentification Risk:
• Most commonly confused with the edible Chanterelle (Cantharellus cibarius)
• Key distinguishing features: true sharp gills (vs. blunt ridges in chanterelles), white spore print (vs. pale yellow), grows on wood (vs. ground), and grows in dense clusters (vs. scattered or in small groups)
• The bioluminescence of O. illudens is a definitive field characteristic — chanterelles do not glow
Omphalotus illudens is not cultivated for food due to its toxicity, but it can be grown for scientific study, bioluminescence research, and educational purposes.

Cultivation Conditions:
• Grows on hardwood sawdust, wood chips, or supplemented hardwood substrates
• Optimal fruiting temperature: 20–25°C
• Requires high humidity (>85% relative humidity) for fruiting body development
• Prefers indirect light or darkness during fruiting
• Mycelium colonizes substrate over several weeks to months

Research Applications:
• Illudin S has been studied as a precursor for the anticancer drug irofulven (hydroxymethylacylfulvene), which has undergone clinical trials
• The bioluminescence pathway has been genetically characterized and has potential applications in molecular biology as a reporter gene system

Wusstest du schon?

The Eastern Jack-o'-Lantern Mushroom's eerie green glow has inspired folklore and scientific curiosity for centuries: • The bioluminescence is bright enough to read by in complete darkness — early European settlers in North America reportedly called such glowing fungi "foxfire" • The glow is produced by a chemical reaction involving the oxidation of 3-hydroxyhispidin by a fungal luciferase enzyme — one of only a handful of bioluminescence pathways characterized in fungi • Of the roughly 100,000 described fungal species, only about 80 are known to be bioluminescent, and Omphalotus illudens is among the brightest • The species name "illudens" ("the deceiving one") is tragically apt — every year, emergency rooms across eastern North America treat foragers who mistake this toxic mushroom for the prized edible chanterelle • Despite its toxicity, the illudin compounds produced by this mushroom have contributed to cancer research: a semi-synthetic derivative called irofulven has been investigated as a novel chemotherapeutic agent targeting DNA repair mechanisms in tumor cells

Mehr erfahren

Kommentare (0)

Noch keine Kommentare. Schreiben Sie den ersten!

Kommentar schreiben

0 / 2000
Teilen: LINE Kopiert!

Ähnliche Pflanzen