Harman Patil (Editor)

Catathelasma evanescens

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Class
  
Agaricomycetes

Family
  
Tricholomataceae

Scientific name
  
Catathelasma evanescens

Division
  
Basidiomycota

Order
  
Agaricales

Genus
  
Catathelasma

Rank
  
Species

Similar
  
Catathelasma, Amparoina spinosissima, Asproinocybe, Cellypha goldbachii, Caulorhiza

Catathelasma evanescens is a species of fungus in the Tricholomataceae family, and the type species of the genus Catathelasma. The species was described by Ruth Ellen Harrison Lovejoy in 1910.

Description and Distribution

The genus includes the commoner C. imperiale and C. ventricosum, but the type species, C. evanescens, seems extremely rare. In 1914 it was only known from the location of the initial find, which is at an altitude of 3500 m. in the Medicine Bow Mountains of Wyoming. It is distinguished from the other species because the gills are fairly distant ("subdistant") and because it has a large persistent volva around the base of the stipe.

The species name may refer to the evanescent ring.

The following summary is taken from Mrs. Lovejoy's original description.

  • Cap: 13 cm, broadly convex, white (but cream in the center).
  • Gills: White, very decurrent, "subdistant", with short and long ones mixed.
  • Stem: White, thick (4 cm.) but very short (1 cm.), with bulbous base, delicate evanescent ring, and large white persistent volva.
  • Spores: smooth, white, elliptical to fusiform, 14 - 17.5 × 3 - 5 µm.
  • References

    Catathelasma evanescens Wikipedia