Hypholoma sublateritium

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Hypholoma sublateritium

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Cortinariales or Agaricales
Family: Strophariaceae
Genus: Hypholoma
Species: H. sublateritium
Binomial name
Hypholoma sublateritium
(Fr.) Quélet

Hypholoma sublateritium, sometimes called Brick Cap, is rarer and less well-known than its relatives, the inedible Sulfur Tuft (Hypholoma fasciculare) and the edible Hypholoma capnoides. Its fruiting bodies are generally larger than either of these.

In Europe this mushroom is often considered inedible or even poisonous, but in the USA and Japan it is apparently a popular edible fungus. One further reason to avoid it is the possibility of confusion with Galerina marginata or H. fasciculare.

[edit] Description

Cap: 3.5-10cm in diameter, usually with a brick-red coloration in the center and a paler margin. It is smooth, sometimes with red-brown flecks in the middle and sometimes with flaky veil remnants, which can easily be washed off in the rain, on the outside.

  • Gills: Crowded, starting yellowish and becoming grayish with age. They do not have the green color of H. fasciculare.
  • Stipe: Light yellow, darker below.
  • Spore powder: Olive purple-brown.
  • Taste: Mild to somewhat bitter.
  • Microscopic characteristics: Spores 6.0-7.5 × 3.5-4.0 μm, with germ pore, cheilocystidia variable.


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Hypholoma sublateritium
mycological characteristics:
 
gills on hymenium
 

cap is convex

 

hymenium is adnate

 

stipe is bare

 

spore print is brown

 

ecology is saprotrophic

 

edibility: edible

[edit] References

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