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

Agrocybe acericola
stump agrocybe (maple agrocybe)
Strophariaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi
Once images have been obtained, photographs of this species will be displayed in this window.Click on the image to enter our photo gallery.
Currently no image is available for this taxon.
E-Flora BC Static Map
Distribution of Agrocybe acericola
Click here to view our interactive map and legend
Details about map content are available here
Click on the map dots to view record details.

Species Information

Summary:
Features include a hygrophanous, yellow brown cap, a large flaring ring, a farinaceous odor, growth on hardwoods or hardwood debris, and dull brown spores.

It has been found in eastern Canada, NY, YT, AB, down to WY, (Schalkwijk-Barendsen). There are collections from BC at the Pacific Forestry Center and the University of British Columbia (as Pholiota acericola as well as Agrocybe acericola).
Cap:
3-7cm broad, "obtuse expanding to plane, with or without a low umbo"; hygrophanous, when young dark yellow brown becoming yellowish brown when old; bald, moist; margin even, opaque, (Hermanson), 3-10cm across, convex then flattened; hygrophanous, dark yellow brown then pale buff when dry; dry, smooth, (Phillips), convex becoming flat, with or without low umbo; ocher-yellow; moist, smooth to wrinkled, (Lincoff), color variable, ocher yellow to yellowish cinnamon or yellow-brown when young, fading to yellowish tan to tan when old, (Bessette)
Flesh:
thin; white, (Phillips)
Gills:
adnate with a decurrent tooth; crowded; pallid to buff becoming brown, (Hermanson), adnate or with decurrent tooth, crowded; pale gray-brown, (Phillips), pale off-white, becoming brown, (Lincoff)
Stem:
5-10cm x 0.4-1.5cm, equal, hollow, fibrous; whitish becoming light blackish brown from base upwards, pallid at top; striate at top, (Hermanson), 5-10cm x 0.5-1cm, pallid buff or whitish, white mycelial threads at base, (Phillips), 4-12.5cm x 0.6-2cm, nearly equal or widening downward, (Bessette), white becoming dark grayish to grayish brown form base up when old, (Bessette)
Veil:
ring well formed, membranous, cream, (Hermanson), ring large, flaring, white, (Phillips), ring large, membranous, (Lincoff), ring large, pendant, persistent, superior, radially striate on upper surface, (Bessette)
Odor:
farinaceous (Hermanson, Phillips)
Taste:
farinaceous (Hermanson, Phillips), farinaceous to bitter (Bessette)
Microscopic spores:
spores 8-10.5 x 5-6.5 microns, apex snout-like with no apical (germ) pore, truncate; pleurocystidia 40-50 x 12-22 microns, clavate-mucronate [club-shaped, tipped with an abrupt short point] to +/- utriform or with 1-3 apical projections, cheilocystidia clavate, (Hermanson), spores 8-10.5 x 5-6.5 microns, smooth, truncate, (Phillips), spores 8-10.5 x 5-6.5 microns, smooth, with germ pore, (Lincoff)
Spore deposit:
dull rust brown (Phillips), cinnamon to rust (Lincoff), cinnamon brown (Bessette)

Habitat / Range

"on decaying logs and woody debris in hardwoods", July to September, (Phillips), single to scattered on decaying hardwood logs and wood chips, especially Acer (maple), April to June and August to September, (Lincoff), scattered, in groups or clusters on decaying hardwood logs, stumps, and wood chips, April to September, (Bessette), on decaying poplar wood in the west of North America (Schalkwijk-Barendsen), spring, summer, fall

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Pholiota acericola (Peck) Sacc.

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links


Genetic information (NCBI Taxonomy Database)
Taxonomic Information from the World Flora Online
Index Fungorium
Taxonomic reference: Trudy Bot. Inst. Akad. Nauk SSSR, ser. 2, Sporov. Rast. 6: 88. 1950; Pholiota acericola (Peck) Sacc.

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

no (Phillips), yes with caution (Lincoff)

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Hermanson(1), Phillips(1)*, Lincoff(2)*, Schalkwijk-Barendsen(1)*, Bessette(2)*, Barron(1)*, Miller(14)

References for the fungi

General References