Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Clitocybe albirhiza

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Kingdom
  
Fungi

Class
  
Agaricomycetes

Rank
  
Species

Division
  
Basidiomycota

Order
  
Agaricales

Genus
  
Clitocybe albirhiza httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Clitocybe glacialis, Clitocybe tarda, Agaricus albolutescens, Caulorhiza, Clitocybe amarescens

Clitocybe albirhiza is a species of agaric fungus in the family Tricholomataceae. It is found in high-elevation locations in the western United States.

Contents

Taxonomy

American mycologists Howard E. Bigelow and Alexander H. Smith first described the species officially in 1963, from specimens collected in June, 1954, near Payette Lake, Idaho.

Description

The cap is initially convex before flattening and finally becoming funnel-shaped. Its color depends on its state of hydration: when dry, it is buff; when wet, it is cinnamon-buff to clay color. The gills have an adnate to decurrent attachment to the stipe and are closely spaced, sometimes with "veins" connected between them. Gills are roughly the same color as the cap, or paler. The stipe measures 3–8 cm (1.2–3.1 in) long by 0.5–2 cm (0.2–0.8 in) wide, and is either equal in width throughout, or tapers on either end. Initially stuffed with a cottony mycelium when young, it hollows in maturity. Colored similar to the cap, the stipe surface ranges from smooth to canescent (covered with a whitish-grey bloom) when wet, to fibrillose-striate when dry. The stipe base features a dense mass of whitish rhizomorphs embedded with needles and other forest debris. The flesh is mostly thin except for the disc (a circular region in the center of the cap). It has a slight to "disagreeable" odor and a "disagreeable and bitter" taste. The edibility of the mushroom is unknown.

The spore print is white. spores are smooth and elliptical, with dimensions of 4.5–6 by 2.5–3.5 µm. The basidia (spore-bearing cells) are typically two- or four-spored (rarely, one-spored) and measure 20–30 by 3.5–5 µm. The hymenium lacks cystidia. Clamp connections are present in the hyphae.

Habitat and distribution

Fruit bodies of Clitocybe albirhiza grow scattered, in groups, or in clusters under spruce, or, occasionally, larch and pine. Found in the US states of Idaho, Washington, and Wyoming, it is abundant in some high-elevation 5,000–10,000 ft (1,500–3,000 m) locations in the Rocky Mountains. It is referred to as a "snowbank mushroom" because fruit bodies typically appear around the edges of melting snowbanks. Fruitings occur most frequently in June and early July, about the same time as snowmelt at the elevations in which the species occurs. In the Cascade Mountains of Washington, C. albirhiza is one of the most common fungi growing on non-serpentine soil.

References

Clitocybe albirhiza Wikipedia


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