Psilocybe strictipes

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Liberty cap
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Hymenomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Strophariaceae
Genus: Psilocybe
Species: P. strictipes
Binomial name
Psilocybe strictipes
Singer & A.H. Smith
Synonyms

Psilocybe callosa

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Psilocybe strictipes
mycological characteristics:
 
gills on hymenium
 
 

cap is conical or campanulate

 
 

hymenium is adnate or subdecurrent

 

stipe is bare

 
 

spore print is brown or purple

 

ecology is saprotrophic

 

edibility: psychoactive

Psilocybe strictipes is a psilocybin mushroom which grows on grassy meadows and lawns; It is found throughout the cool temperate and subarctic regions of the Northern Hemisphere and it is most common in Europe, and the Pacific Northwest. It is closely related to Psilocybe semilanceata and Psilocybe pelliculosa. Psilocybe strictipes is commonly confused with Psilocybe semilanceata and can be differentiated by its lack of a papilla and a convex to subumbonate cap.

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[edit] Description

  • Cap: 5 to 30 mm across, conic to campanulate to convex, smooth, translucent-striate near the margin, often with a low umbo. Walnut brown to dark rusty brown, with a smooth surface and a separable gelatinous pellicle. Hygrophanous, fading to buff as it dries. The flesh sometimes stains blue where damaged.
  • Gills: Cream colored when young, dark purple brown when mature, adnate attachment.
  • Spores: Dark purple brown, suboblong, 11 x 6 micrometers.
  • Stipe: White to ocher, equal, tough and cartilaginous with fibrillose patches, 4 to 10 cm long, .25 cm thick. The partial veil is thin, cortinate, and does not usually leave any remnants on the stipe.
  • Taste: Farinaceous.
  • Odor: Farinaceous.
  • Microscopic features: Pleurocystidia absent, cheilocystidia 21-45 by 7-10 micrometers, lageniform with a neck.

[edit] Habitat and distribution

Fruits late summer to fall in Chile, England, France, Germany, Holland, Slovakia, Siberia, Sweden, and the Pacific Northwest.

Found in lawns and grassy fields, never growing directly from dung.

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