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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: soil.Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa.Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688.Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera.Ref.:(1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com.(2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Slo.: zailjena razcepljenka - , syn.: Inocybe fastigiata (Schaeff.) Quell. - Habitat: bare ground in mixed forest, Picea abies and Fagus sylvatica dominant trees; under a group of large Picea abies; flat, raw humus rich, calcareous ground, old alluvium at the bottom of an alpine valley; in shade; partly protected from direct rain by tree canopies; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevation 985 m (3.250 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: soil. Comments: Inocybe is a huge genus with hundreds of mainly small, pale colored, mostly malodorous species. Arora (Ref.8) funnily describes them as follows: 'They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites... Almost without exception they not only qualify as LBM's (Little-Brown-Mushroom), but also as BUM's (Boring-Ubiquitous-Mushrooms), and it is necessary to know the size and shape of the spores and cystidia before an accurate identification can be made. Even then, unraveling them is a trying and tedious task whose futility is only exceeded by its pointlessness, and underscored by the sad fact that most of them are poisonous'. Yet, Inocybe rimosa seems to me quite interesting. It is not difficult to recognize it although it is quite variable and actually a complex of varieties, which many of them are named even at higher taxonomical levels by some authors (look at picture 2M for the scatter of spore dimensions given by different authors). With the help of the key given in Krieglsteiner (2010) (Ref.4) even 'var. rimosa' was apparently easy to be determined. This name is legitimate according to MycoBank, however, Index Fungorum doesn't recognize it as a valid name and considers it as a synonym of Inocybe rimosa. Growing solitary; a single pileus found; cap diameter 5 cm, height 4.2 cm; stipe 12 cm long, 1 cm in diameter, fibrous, not hollow, twisted, and deeply rooted in ground; gills distinctly lemon-yellowish with slight green tint, oac6; after 24 hours being kept in refrigerator pale ocher-brown, oac717; SP pale ocher, oac688. Spores smooth, thick-walled. Dimensions: 10,6 [12 ; 12,6] 14 x 6,8 [7,5 ; 7,7] 8,4 microns; Q = 1,4 [1,6 ; 1,7] 1,9; N = 42; C = 95%; Me = 12,3 x 7,6 microns; Qe = 1,6. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera. Ref.: (1) Personal communication with Mr. Bojan Rot, www.gobenabovskem.com. (2) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 368. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.5., Verlag Mykologia (1991), p 76. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 5., Ulmer (2010), p 435. (5) M. Bon, Parey's Buch der Pilze, Kosmos (2005), p 234. (6) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 219. (7) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 645. (8) D. Arora, Mushrooms Demystified, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley (1986), p 455.
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Buderupholm Bjergskov, Rold Skov, Jylland, Danmark
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Buderupholm Bjergskov, Rold Skov, Jylland, Danmark
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Buderupholm Bjergskov, Rold Skov, Jylland, Danmark
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Buderupholm Bjergskov, Rold Skov, Jylland, Danmark
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Buderupholm Bjergskov, Rold Skov, Jylland, Danmark
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Mushroom Observer Image 956010: Inocybe rimosa (Bull.) P. Kumm.
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Description: English: Inocybe rimosa in la Forêt de la Roche Turpin near Arpajon, France. Date: 31 August 2013. Source: Own work. Author:
Strobilomyces. Identification notes[
edit] Smell spermatic Club-shaped cheilocystidia 50×11µ, not metuloid Spores smooth, approx. 11×6µ Camera location
48° 34′ 00″ N, 2° 11′ 00″ E View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 48.566667; 2.183333.
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Description: Inocybe rimosa (location: Poland, Kamionna, województwo małopolskie). Date: 24 May 2016, 22:43:45. Source: Own work. Author: Jerzy Opioła.
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Description: Polski: Inocybe rimosa. Location: Slovakia, Wielka Fatra, Malinne. Date: 1 September 2019, 12:01:09. Source: Own work. Author:
Jerzy Opioła.
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Description: Inocybe rimosa (location: Polans, Nowe Rybie). Date: 20 October 2015, 23:21:37. Source: Own work. Author: Jerzy Opioła.
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Description: Inocybe rimosa (location: Slovakia, Veľká Fatra). Date: 9 September 2016, 04:27:59. Source: Own work. Author:
Jerzy Opioła.
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This image was created by user Igor (Igor_Yevdokimov) at Mushroom Observer, a source for mycological images.You can contact this user here. English | español | français | italiano | македонски | português | +/−
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Summary.mw-parser-output table.commons-file-information-table,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information{border:1px solid #a2a9b1;background-color:#f8f9fa;padding:5px;font-size:95%;border-spacing:2px;box-sizing:border-box;margin:0;width:100%}.mw-parser-output table.commons-file-information-table>tbody>tr,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody>tr{vertical-align:top}.mw-parser-output table.commons-file-information-table>tbody>tr>td,.mw-parser-output table.commons-file-information-table>tbody>tr>th,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody>tr>td,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody>tr>th{padding:4px}.mw-parser-output.fileinfo-paramfield{background:#ccf;text-align:right;padding-right:0.4em;width:15%;font-weight:bold}.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table+table.commons-file-information-table,.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table+div.commons-file-information-table>table{border-top:0;padding-top:0;margin-top:-8px}@media only screen and (max-width:719px){.mw-parser-output table.commons-file-information-table,.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table.fileinfotpl-type-information{border-spacing:0;padding:0;word-break:break-word;width:100%!important}.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table>tbody,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody{display:block}.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table>tbody>tr>td,.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table>tbody>tr>th,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody>tr>td,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody>tr>th{padding:0.2em 0.4em;text-align:left;text-align:start}.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table>tbody>tr,.mw-parser-output.fileinfotpl-type-information>tbody>tr{display:flex;flex-direction:column}.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table+table.commons-file-information-table,.mw-parser-output.commons-file-information-table+div.commons-file-information-table>table{margin-top:-1px}.mw-parser-output.fileinfo-paramfield{box-sizing:border-box;flex:1 0 100%;width:100%}} Description: Inocybe rimosa (Bull.) P. Kumm. Image location: Borovoye National Park, Akmola District, Kazakhstan It is single or small group in pine-tree forest with rare birches. Recognized by sight
: For more information about this, see the
observation page at Mushroom Observer.
English |
español |
français |
italiano |
македонски |
മലയാളം |
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+/−. Date: 15 September 2016. Source:
: This image is
Image Number 690248 at
Mushroom Observer, a source for mycological images. This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal
copyright tag is still required. See
Commons:Licensing.
English |
español |
français |
italiano |
македонски |
മലയാളം |
português |
+/−. Author:
: This image was created by user
Igor (Igor_Yevdokimov) at
Mushroom Observer, a source for mycological images.You can contact this user
here.
English |
español |
français |
italiano |
македонски |
മലയാളം |
português |
+/−. Camera location
53° 00′ 52.56″ N, 70° 11′ 04.56″ E View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap 53.014600; 70.184600.
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Description: Polski: Inocybe rimosa. Location: Slovakia, Wielka Fatra, Malinne. Date: 1 September 2019, 12:01:09. Source: Own work. Author:
Jerzy Opioła.
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Description: Inocybe rimosa (location: Polans, Nowe Rybie). Date: 20 October 2015, 23:21:29. Source: Own work. Author: Jerzy Opioła.
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