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

Deconica phyllogena
No common name
Hymenogastraceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi
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Distribution of Deconica phyllogena
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Species Information

Summary:
Features include 1) a hygrophanous, dark brown to pale gray brown to ochraceous buff cap with peelable skin and a striate margin, 2) cream to light cinnamon brown to gray brown to dark brown gills sometimes with a violet tint, 3) a brown stem with white fibrils, 4) growth on needles, leaves, mosses, twigs or other herbal debris, and 5) spores that are rhomboid to miter-shaped in face view. The online Species Fungorum, accessed April 18, 2016, gave the current name as Deconica phyllogena (Sacc.) Noordel., Ost. Z. Pilzk. 18: 198 (2009).

It was reported from BC according to Redhead(5) (as P. rhombispora), There are collections from BC and WA at the University of British Columbia. It also occurs in Europe.
Gills:
broadly adnate, 27-31 reaching stem, broad, 3-7 subgills between each pair of gills; cream when young, becoming light cinnamon brown to purple-brown; edges white-flocculose, (Breitenbach), first gray brown then dark brown and sometimes with a slightly violet tint, (Hansen)
Stem:
2-4cm x 0.1-0.25cm, cylindric with slightly bulbous base, solid, rigid but snappable; whole surface whitish-fibrillose-scaly on a red-brown to black-brown background, (Breitenbach), thin, brown, covered with white fibrils, (Hansen)
Odor:
polyporoid (Breitenbach)
Taste:
bitterish, spicy, (Breitenbach), slightly rancid (Buczacki)
Microscopic spores:
spores 5.7-7.5 x 3.5-4.6 x 4.7-5.9 microns, rhomboidal-mitriform in frontal view, elliptic - almond-shaped in side view, smooth, yellow-brown, thick-walled, with a germ pore; basidia 4-spored, 20-25 x 6.5-7.5 microns, clavate, with basal clamp connection; pleurocystidia not seen, cheilocystidia 30-55 x 4.5-8 microns, fusiform-lageniform, some with a colorless vesicular secretion at top; cap cuticle of gelatinized, +/- periclinal hyphae 2-4 microns wide, "with vesicular, irregularly disposed cells below, all with faint yellowish pigmentation", septa with clamp connections, (Breitenbach), spores (5.5)6-9(11.5) x 4-6 x 3.5-4.5 microns, +/- rhomboid in face view, (Hansen), spores 5.5-7 x 4.7-5 x 3.5-4 microns, almost rhombic-lenticular, (Moser)
Spore deposit:
brown-violet (Breitenbach), mid-brown (Buczacki)

Habitat / Range

usually gregarious, more rarely single "in hardwood and coniferous forests, on rotten wood, mosses, or leaves", (Breitenbach for Europe), on "herbal debris, small fallen twigs, or mosses, often on moist ground", (Hansen for Europe), on dead leaves or needles (Moser for Europe), summer to fall (Buczacki)

Synonyms and Alternate Names

Psilocybe phyllogena (Peck) Peck

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links


Genetic information (NCBI Taxonomy Database)
Taxonomic Information from the World Flora Online
Index Fungorium
Taxonomic reference: Ost. Z. Pilzk. 18: 198. 2009; Psilocybe phyllogena (Peck) Peck Bull. N.Y. State Mus. 157: 99. 1912; Deconica rhombispora (Britzelm.) Singer; Psilocybe rhombispora (Britzelm.) Sacc.

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

Additional Photo Sources

Related Databases

Species References

Breitenbach(4)* (as Psilocybe rhombispora), Hansen, L.(2) (as Psilocybe rhombispora), Moser(1) (as Psilocybe rhombispora), Redhead(5) (as Psilocybe rhombispora), Guzman(1) (as Psilocybe phyllogena), Buczacki(1)* (as Psilocybe phyllogena)

References for the fungi

General References