Calvatia gigantea (Batsch) Lloyd

First published in Mycol. Writ. 1 (Lycoperd. Australia) 1: 166 (1904)
This species is accepted
This species is found in Europe, South America, North America, Australasia and Russian Far East. It is used to treat blood system disorders and as a poison.

Descriptions

Morphology
Solitary. Gregarious. Basidiome: up to 6 cm or more wide, spherical to subspherical; surface white when fresh, becoming yellowish or olive brown, finely velvety when young, then glabrous, soft. Gleba: white and fleshy, becoming yellowish or greenish yellow and eventually pulverulent, brown. Exoperidium: cracked. Often with a rhizomorph. Odor: faint, pleasant. Taste: not distinctive. Spore print: olive-brown. Spores: globose or subglobose, echinulate to smooth, purplish brown.
Conservation
Species proposed. Notes: This is a widespread species. It would likely qualify as Least Concern if there is no evidence for any rapid declines.
Habit
Solitary. Gregarious.
Distribution
Global distribution. Colombian departments: Nariño.
Ecology
Saprotroph. - Soil saprotroph. Habitat/ecology: in grass, often at the edges of meadows, in drainage ditches, or under brush.
[CFC]

Kew Species Profiles

summary

The giant puffball is a distinctive species, producing perhaps the largest of all fungal fruitbodies. These occur from late summer through the autumn and can be found in various grassy habitats or amongst scrub. It is a good edible fungus whilst young and still white inside. The flesh becomes yellowish and then dark olive-brownish as the spores develop. The fruitbody eventually becomes filled with a mass of rather powdery spores, which are developed in a tissue called the capillitium. At maturity, the outer wall (peridium) breaks open and the spores are released in response to physical contact such as rain splash. 

General Description

The giant puffball is a distinctive species, producing perhaps the largest of all fungal fruitbodies. These occur from late summer through the autumn and can be found in various grassy habitats or amongst scrub. It is a good edible fungus whilst young and still white inside. The flesh becomes yellowish and then dark olive-brownish as the spores develop. The fruitbody eventually becomes filled with a mass of rather powdery spores, which are developed in a tissue called the capillitium. At maturity, the outer wall (peridium) breaks open and the spores are released in response to physical contact such as rain splash. 

Species Profile
Geography and distribution

Calvatia gigantea is widespread and found in temperate regions throughout much of both the northern and southern hemispheres. The species occurs throughout the British Isles.

Description

This distinctive species can be recognised by the large, rounded fruitbody, 20 to 60 cm across, with no stipe (stalk). The surface is white at first, later somewhat discoloured to yellowish or pale olive-brown. The surface is matt, finely velvety and somewhat like kid leather to the touch. It later becomes smooth, rather papery and breaks away to reveal the gleba (fertile tissue) which contains the spores. The gleba is white at first, then yellow to dark olive-brown. The spores are olive-brown in mass, rounded, 4 to 5 μm wide, with a finely warted surface and are produced in abundance.

Although most mature specimens are football-sized, some grow much larger. The largest British specimen ever measured was 162 cm (64 in) in circumference, and claims for American specimens around 1.5 m across have been made! Such large specimens may be over 20 kg in weight, though about 4 kg is more usual.

Puffballs explained

Calvatia gigantea is one of over 20 British species broadly referred to as 'puffballs'. As the name suggests, these all produce a powdery spore mass at maturity, developed in the fertile tissue (the gleba) inside a rounded or club-shaped fruitbody. True puffballs belong to the genus Lycoperdon , of which a dozen or so species occur in Britain. These all have a well-defined circular pore at the top, through which the spores are released by a bellows mechanism, usually due to falling rain drops. Other puffballs have a wall which breaks open irregularly to expose the spore mass. They include the large 'mosaic puffball' ( Handkea utriformis ) found in unimproved grasslands, and the 'pestle-shaped puffball' ( Handkea excipuliformis ) which usually occurs in woodland. These differ from giant puffball particularly in having a well-defined sterile base.

The most prolific organism?

This species is perhaps the most prolific of all fungi, and perhaps of all organisms. The total number of spores produced by a single, average-sized fruitbody is estimated at around 7 trillion - with large specimens producing many more. We are not over-run with puffballs, however, as spore viability is low, and most do not germinate. In fact experiments have reported a spore germination rate of less than 0.001%.

No specific threats have been identified, and the giant puffball is not currently considered as of conservation concern in the UK. It has not been evaluated by IUCN, but is protected in parts of Poland, considered of conservation concern in Norway, and rare in Lithuania.

Threats and conservation

No specific threats have been identified, and the giant puffball is not currently considered as of conservation concern in the UK. It has not been evaluated by IUCN, but is protected in parts of Poland, considered of conservation concern in Norway, and rare in Lithuania.

Uses

This is an excellent edible fungus, long sought after for its culinary value. It was well known to the Greeks and Romans, and attempts to cultivate the species, though unsuccessful, were made in Denmark more than 150 years ago.

It has also been used in medicine, for example as a styptic (to contract tissues and reduce bleeding) and for wound dressing. The anti-cancer agent calvacin has been isolated from young fruitbodies and especially cultures of giant puffball, as well as from some other puffball species. It has proved effective against tumours, but unfortunately is present only in tiny quantities.

As might be expected for such a well-known fungus, giant puffball has had a variety of folk uses in Britain and elsewhere. Use as tinder was frequent, and it has also been used in beekeeping. Fumes from smouldering fruitbodies placed beneath the hive calm the bees and allow easier access to the hive.

Giant puffball at Kew

Calvatia gigantea has occasionally been recorded in the Gardens but is not common.

Preserved specimens of Calvatia gigantea from throughout its range are maintained in the Kew Mycology Herbarium and, although not accessible to the general public, are available for study by research workers worldwide.

Distribution
Norway, Poland, United Kingdom
Ecology
Found in nutrient-rich grassy places, parks, fields, roadside verges, scrub and woodland edge.
Conservation
Widespread and fairly common, and not considered of conservation concern in the UK. However, it is protected in parts of Poland and considered rare in Lithuania and of conservation concern in Norway.
Hazards

None. This is an excellent edible species if collected when young and in good condition. Fruitbodies must be collected before the spores mature and when still white inside. Those from roadside verges should be avoided due to possible pollution from vehicl

[KSP]

Uses

Use Medicines Blood System Disorders
Part used: Basidiome. In Colombia, in the department of Nariño it is reported as hemostatic.
Use Poisons Other Poison Type
Part used: Basidiome. In Colombia, it is used as disinfectant in the department of Nariño.
[CFC]

Use
Food, medicinal, tinder, bee keeping.
[KSP]

Common Names

English
Giant puffball

Sources

  • Catalogue of Fungi of Colombia

    • © Copyright 2016 Index Fungorum Partnership. All rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
    • © Copyright 2021 Useful Plants and Fungi of Colombia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
    • © Copyright 2021 Index Fungorum Partnership. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • Kew Species Profiles

    • Kew Species Profiles
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0