Conocybe apala

Conocybe apala
Conocybe apala
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Subclass: Hymenomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Bolbitiaceae
Genus: Conocybe
Species: C. apala
Binomial name
Conocybe apala
((Fr.) Arnolds, 2003)
Synonyms

Conocybe lactea
Conocybe lactea var. huijsmanii
Conocybe lateritia
Conocybe albipes
Bolbitius lacteus
Bolbitius albipes
Bolbitius tener

Conocybe apala
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Mycological characteristics

gills on hymenium
cap is conical

hymenium is adnexed

or free
stipe is bare

spore print is brown

to reddish-brown
ecology is saprotrophic
edibility: inedible

Conocybe apala is a basidiomycete fungus and a member of Conocybe. It is a fairly common fungus, both in North America and Europe, found growing among short green grass. Until recently, the species was also commonly called Conocybe lactea or Conocybe albipes and is colloquially known as the White Dunce Cap .[1] Other common synonyms such as Bolbitius lacteus J.B.E. Lange 1940 and Bolbitius albipes G.H. Otth 1871, place the fungus in the genus Bolbitius.

Description

Easily missable due to their very small size, C. apala fruit bodies are otherwise quite easy to identify. The cap has a pale cream to silvery-white colour and may sometimes have a darker yellow to brown coloration towards the central umbo. Its trademark hood-shaped conical cap expands with age and may flatten out, the surface being marked by minute radiating ridges. The cap can be up to 3 cm in diameter. The gills may be visible through the thin cap and these are coloured rust or cinnamon brown and quite dense. They are adnexed or free and release brown to reddish-brown elliptical spores producing a spore print of the same colour. The stem is cap-coloured, elongated, thin, hollow and more or less equal along its length with a height up to 11 cm and diameter 0.1 to 0.3 cm.[2][3] It can bear minuscule striations or hairs. The flesh of C. apala has no discernible taste or smell.

It must be stressed that all parts of this small, light fungus are extremely delicate and fragile. The slender stem enables the mushroom to compete with vegetation for access to air currents for spore dispersal.

Habitat

C. apala is a saprobe found in areas with rich soil and short grass such as pastures, playing fields, lawns, meadows as well as rotting manured straw, fruiting single or sparingly few ephemeral bodies. It is commonly found fruiting during humid, rainy weather with generally overcast skies. It will appear on sunny mornings while there is dew but will not persist once it evaporates. In most cases, by midday the delicate fruiting bodies shrivel, dry and fade from sight. C.apala's fruiting season begins in spring and ends in autumn.[2] It is distributed across Europe and North America.[4]

Edibility

C. apala does not bear a distinctive taste or smell. While it is widely quoted as inedible and worthless[2][3] due to its small size and mass, it is suspect for toxicity according to at least one author.[4] Other members of the Conocybe genus, like Conocybe filaris, are toxic.

External links and resources

  1. Index Fungorum - Names Record
  2. 1 2 3 "Conocybe albipes at Mushroom Expert". Mushroom Expert. Retrieved July 16, 2009.
  3. 1 2 M. Jordan (1995). The Encyclopedia of Fungi of Britain and Europe. David & Charles. p. 249. ISBN 0-7153-0129-2.
  4. 1 2 "Conocybe lactea at Rogers Mushrooms". Rogers Mushrooms. Retrieved July 16, 2009.
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