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Cuphophyllus lepidopus (Rea) A.M. Ainsw.

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Scientific name
Cuphophyllus lepidopus
Author
(Rea) A.M. Ainsw.
Common names
 
IUCN Specialist Group
Mushroom, Bracket and Puffball
Kingdom
Fungi
Phylum
Basidiomycota
Class
Agaricomycetes
Order
Agaricales
Family
Hygrophoraceae
Assessment status
Published
Assessment date
2018-11-01
IUCN Red List Category
VU
IUCN Red List Criteria
A2c+3c+4c
Assessors
Ainsworth, A.M.
Reviewers
Dahlberg, A.

Assessment Notes

The content on this page is fetched from The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/126002894/126002911

Justification

Cuphophyllus lepidopus belongs to the European waxcap assemblage, other members of which are globally assessed as threatened based on the declining area/quality of their grassland habitat. This assemblage is declining across Europe due to changes in land use (agricultural intensification and decline of traditional farming practices) and increasing use of fertilizers and pesticides. Decline in area and quality of available habitat has approached (or possibly exceeded) 30% over the last 50 years; the decline in population size over this time could be higher. This decline in habitat is expected to continue even more rapidly over the next 50 years (approximately three generations: one generation for species of Hygrocybe s.l. is around 17 years). Currently the population size probably exceeds 20,000 mature individuals hence criterion C is not applicable. This species meets the threshold for VU A2c+3c+4c.

Taxonomic notes

This name is based on Hygrophorus lepidopus Rea 1927 with a description based on English material (Herefordshire). After a long gap in British records it was refound in 2004 and recombined at varietal level as Hygrocybe fornicata var. lepidopus (Rea) Boertm. & N. Barden 2007. However DNA analysis (Dentinger et al. unpubl.) supports its recognition at specific rank.

Geographic range

Described as “rare” in the protologue (Rea 1927), this taxon is still only known from very few sites in Britain. However it has been synonymised with C. fornicatus in recent times and might have been overlooked. Its true distribution is unknown because of likely morphological overlap between this species and C. fornicatus.

Population and Trends

The population size is unknown but could possibly exceed 20,000 mature individuals. The population is decreasing in all known occupied European countries, caused by a cessation of small scale farming and traditional methods of grassland management. The eastern boundary of the range is, as is the case for all members of this assemblage, unclear because of lack of data. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the area of grasslands in the EU declined by 12.8% over 13 y (1990-2003); only a few Member States managed to avoid this trend (Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations 2006: FAO Statistical Yearbook – FAOSTAT). Based on this, the decline is inferred to be 30% over 30 years (past, future and ongoing) but may actually be as high as 50% over three generations (50 years; e.g., 1975-2025) and even higher over longer time-frames.

Population Trend: decreasing


Habitat and Ecology

Cuphophyllus lepidopus is an indicator of mycologically rich but nutrient-poor, semi-natural grassland (a member of the waxcap grassland assemblage). This habitat, which may be of low conservation concern for its plant and animal diversity, is rapidly disappearing worldwide due to changes in land use (intensification of farming practice, eutrophication and increased use of fertilizers and pesticides). Waxcaps are currently regarded as forming a biotrophic relationship with plants but the details remain unclear. Fruiting populations of waxcaps are nitrogen sensitive and dependent on a regime of grazing or mowing without applications of fertilizer or pesticide. The waxcap grassland assemblage is characterised by a large diversity of other fungal genera (including Entoloma, clavarioid taxa and geoglossoid taxa) that have similar nutrient and management requirements. Addition of fertilizers or cessation of grazing/mowing management is rapidly detrimental to fruiting community diversity.

Threats

As a species dependent on semi-natural grasslands, Cuphophyllus lepidopus is threatened by habitat loss and degradation due to a decrease in small scale, low intensity farming. The main reasons for decline involve land that is no longer farmed or, if still in the farming system, is subjected to ploughing, reseeding, fertiliser application (mainly of phosphorus and nitrogen), reduced grazing intensity and eutrophication. According to NATURA 2000 reports (Calaciura and Spinelli 2008), grassland habitats are steadily decreasing, mainly due to abandonment or change in land use. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the area of grasslands in the EU declined by 12.8% from 1990 to 2003; only a few Member States managed to avoid this trend (Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations 2006: FAO Statistical Yearbook – FAOSTAT). Pressure caused by land use changes on grassland habitats is steadily increasing. Some 60% of newly afforested areas in the EU formerly was used as permanent/seasonal grazing land or hay-production in natural meadows. More than 75% of the grassland habitats in the EU are in an unfavourable conservation status, according to draft data provided by Member States under Article 17 of the Habitats Directive. Over the past decade, grassland butterflies have suffered large declines in Europe, with a reduction of abundance by almost 50%, with little sign of improvement (SEBI 2010 Biodiversity Indicators). According to the European Environment Agency (2015), natural and semi-natural grasslands have undergone a major decline in recent decades. Grasslands have one of the lowest proportions (11%) of favourable condition assessments and one of the highest proportions of decreasing assessments of all the terrestrial ecosystems considered. About 49 % of EU assessments for the 45 grassland habitat types of Community interest are “unfavourable-bad”. Moreover, almost 50% of grassland-associated birds are declining and the conservation status of other species is mostly “un-favourable”. Grassland butterflies, for example, are declining severely and there is no sign of level-ling off. Accordingly, Janssen et al. (2016) (European Red List of Habitats) reported that 53 % of the grassland habitats in Europe are threatened to some degree (the second most threatened habitat type after “mires and bogs”).

Conservation Actions

Site protection and management of habitats are both very important conservation actions for this species. Grazing, at least before the onset of the fruiting season, is of fundamental importance. On sites (e.g. sloping ground, thin soils) where cattle would cause soil erosion, sheep are the preferred grazing animal. Mowing, with collection of ‘arisings’, can substitute for grazing.

Source and Citation

Ainsworth, A.M. 2019. Cuphophyllus lepidopus. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019: e.T126002894A126002911. https://dx.doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-1.RLTS.T126002894A126002911.en .Accessed on 3 February 2025

Country occurrence