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

Mycena epipterygia var. epipterygia
(Mycena epipterygia var. epipterygia)yellow-stemmed mycena
Mycenaceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

© Paul Dawson  Email the photographer   (Photo ID #89523)

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Distribution of Mycena epipterygia var. epipterygia
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Species Information

Summary:
Section Viscosae (Smith), Section Hygrocyboideae (Maas Geesteranus). Features include 1) small size, 2) a viscid cap that is yellow with a whitish margin, 3) pallid yellowish gills, 4) a glutinous pale yellow stem, 5) a farinaceous odor and taste, 6) growth on conifer wood, and 7) microscopic details including cheilocystidia that are clavate and covered with short rod-like projections. The description is derived from Smith(1).

Collections of Mycena epipterygia var. lignicola were studied from WA, MT, and MI (Smith). Smith gives the distribution as NS to WA and southward where conifers are found. There are Scott Redhead collections from BC at the University of British Columbia. Breitenbach(3) give the distribution as North America and Europe.
Gills:
adnate by a tooth, subdistant to distant, narrow; white to pale yellow; edges even
Stem:
4-6cm x 0.1-0.15cm, equal; bright yellow fading to pale yellow; viscid, bald, base faintly strigose [hairy]
Odor:
slightly to rather strongly farinaceous, in one specimen a strong iodoform smell after a few hours (cf. var. epipterygia which can have iodoform odor), another had a nitrous odor
Taste:
slightly to rather strongly farinaceous
Microscopic spores:
spores (9)10-12(13) x 5.5-8 microns, broadly elliptic to oval, amyloid, [presumably smooth]; basidia 2-spored, 3-spored, 4-spored; pleurocystidia not differentiated, cheilocystidia abundant, gelatinizing and forming a sterile band on gill edge, clavate and covered with short rod-like projections
Spore deposit:
[presumably white or pale buff]

Habitat / Range

gregarious on conifer wood

Taxonomic and Nomenclatural Links

Additional Range and Status Information Links

Edibility

unknown

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Species References

Smith(1) (colors in double quotation marks from Ridgway(1)), Maas Geesteranus(1), Breitenbach(3)* (illustrated collection lacks farinaceous odor)

References for the fungi

General References