Hebeloma sinapizans



Cortinarius husseyiKey to Gilled Mushrooms     Key
This is a key to gilled mushrooms, that is, mushrooms having a definite cap with a fertile surface consisting of gills. The fruiting body usually also has a stem, although that may be lateral or absent (usually, then, the mushroom is growing from wood). You can use this key to identify mushrooms that you find.



TricholomaAgaricales     Order
Fruiting body containing fibers (usually in the stalk)



Inocybe pyriodoraBrown, Olive, Orange or Tan Spored     Suborder
Gills not free
Spore print tan, orange, deep ochre, yellowish olive, olive brown, rusty or cinnamon brown or deep brown
Ring usually either absent or not membranous



Cortinarius semisanguineusTerrestrial Brown Spored     Family
Growing on the ground


TricholomaHebeloma     Genus
Cap up to 4" across, but usually more like 1"; glabrous; some extremely nondescript shade of greyish brown
Stem fleshy
Gill edges often appear white, minutely fringed
Always mycorrhizal; almost always in forests


Non-veiled Hebeloma     Section
No partial veil


Hebeloma sinapizans     (J. J. Paulet) C. C. Gillet

Here are the characters that distinguish this species from the others in its group. For its more general characters, see higher up on the page.
If there's just a few words or a microscopic feature here, a more thorough description can be found above.

Diagnosis


Microscropic Characters


Comments

This is the largest of the genus, and is easily mistaken for a Cortinarius; but it lacks a cortina


 

 


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