E-Flora BC: Electronic Atlas of the Flora of British Columbia

Mycena alphitophora
no common name
Mycenaceae

Species account author: Ian Gibson.
Extracted from Matchmaker: Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest.

Introduction to the Macrofungi
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Distribution of Mycena alphitophora
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Species Information

Summary:
Sacchariferae (Maas Geesteranus), Smith places in Subgenus Pseudomycena (characterized by a bulb or disc at the stem base) Section Tenerrimae (coarsely granular under a hand lens due to warty round cells). Features include small size, a dry pale gray cap with a white-powdery sugar-like covering, white gills, a white stem with a thickened base, growth on conifer needles and fern debris, a white spore deposit, and elliptic, weakly amyloid spores. The description is derived from Smith(1).

Mycena alphitophora is found at least in BC, WA, ON, AL, MI, NC, NY, OH, TN, and Belize, (Smith). It occurs in North America, Bermuda, and Europe, (Maas Geesteranus).
Cap:
(0.2)0.3-0.6cm across, convex to obtuse becoming conic or remaining convex, the margin on some flaring or recurved [upcurved] when old; pale gray under white powdery covering, fading to chalk white; dry and powdery due to sugar-like covering
Flesh:
thin, flaccid
Gills:
free or attached by a slight tooth, distant to subdistant, narrow; white
Stem:
2-3cm long and up to 0.1cm thick, slightly thickened toward base, tubular, white villous from base upward (hairs shorter toward top), appearing finely pruinose or chalky in appearance when old, "base abruptly inserted on fallen larch needles"
Odor:
not distinctive
Taste:
not distinctive
Microscopic spores:
spores 7-9(10) x 4-5 microns, elliptic, weakly amyloid, [presumably smooth]; basidia usually 4-spored, rarely 2-spored; pleurocystidia none, cheilocystidia abundant, 18-28 x 9-15 microns, clavate, the enlarged part covered with small blunt projections or densely warty, cap tissue covered with layer of inflated or spherical readily detachable warty cells 18-24 x 10-30 microns
Spore deposit:
[presumably white]

Habitat / Range

single to scattered on conifer needles, fern debris, or old leaves, spring, summer, fall, (Smith), usually found on fern rhizomes in hothouses, only occasionally in nature, (Maas Geesteranus)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Mycena osmundicola J.E. Lange

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links


Genetic information (NCBI Taxonomy Database)
Taxonomic Information from the World Flora Online
Index Fungorium
Taxonomic reference: Syll. Fung. 5: 290. 1887; Mycena osmundicola J.E. Lange

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Smith(1) (as M. osmundicola), Maas Geesteranus(1)

References for the fungi

General References