Psilocybe cyanescens
wavy-capped psilocybe
Hymenogastraceae

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

Introduction to the Macrofungi

Photograph

© Michael Beug     (Photo ID #17506)


Map

E-Flora BC Static Map

Distribution of Psilocybe cyanescens
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Species Information

Summary:
Fieldmarks include 1) a viscid, peelable, caramel-brown cap that fades as it dries, and usually becomes wavy as it expands, 2) blueing of the flesh and stem, 3) a fleeting veil, and 4) dark spores. Other features include 5) adnate, close to subdistant, broad, cinnamon brown gills that become smoky brown from spores and that often have paler edges, 6) a whitish, silky stem, 7) a farinaceous to mild odor, and 8) growth on humus enriched with woody debris, both in gardens (especially with rhododendrons) and forested areas. "P. cyanescens, originally described from England, appears to represent a complex. In fact the presence of pleurocystidia in the North American taxon suggests it may be a separate species, as in Europe P. cyanescens has no pleurocystidia" (Guzman(4), Latin names italicized). Psilocybe cyanescens is a common Psilocybe in the Pacific Northwest.
Cap:
2-4(5)cm across, obtusely conic to conic-convex at first, soon broadly convex, then flat with an undulating or wavy margin; hygrophanous, chestnut brown becoming caramel brown, then fading to dark yellowish brown or ochraceous on drying; smooth, viscid when moist from a sometimes separable, gelatinous cap skin, margin translucent-striate, (Stamets), (1)2-5(7.5)cm across, subconic or convex to bell-shaped, becoming irregularly expanded flat-convex or flat to depressed, sometimes subumbonate; "hygrophanous, orangish brown, brownish red, grayish pinkish brown, or chestnut color, fading to yellowish, straw color, or ochraceous", easily staining blue when touched or injured; viscid, bald, even, but margin slightly striate when moist, (Guzman(1)), 1.5-4(5)cm across, soon convex to broadly convex, then flat or with uplifted, often wavy margin; dark brown or reddish brown becoming caramel brown, then fading as it dries to tan, yellowish brown, or paler, sometimes with blue or blue-green stains, especially near margin; viscid when moist, smooth, (Arora)
Flesh:
nearly colored as cap and bruising bluish, (Stamets), yellowish and pliant or fleshy in cap, whitish to orangish yellow and cartilaginous in stem mainly toward base, easily staining blue when cut, (Guzman(1)), thin; bruising blue or blue-green, (Arora)
Gills:
adnate to subdecurrent, close to subdistant, broad; cinnamon brown becoming deep smoky brown, edges paler, (Stamets), adnate to sinuate, yellowish brown or orangish brown to violaceous brown, sometimes somewhat mottled, with edges colored as faces or nearly whitish, (Guzman(1)), "typically adnate but sometimes seceding, fairly close"; brown or cinnamon brown becoming dark smoky brown or sometimes bluish-stained, edges whitish, (Arora)
Stem:
2-8cm x 0.2-0.5cm, equal or with a widened base, often curved, stiff but not pliant; whitish, but readily bruising bluish; "silky, covered with fine fibrils and often with long whitish rhizomorphs protruding about base of stem", (Stamets), (4)6-9(11)cm x (0.3)0.4-0.6(0.7)cm, equal, cylindric or somewhat bulbous, straight or sometimes irregularly flexuous [wavy], often with base curved, "hard and cartilaginous, solid to hollow"; white to whitish, readily changing to blue when bruised; silky-fibrillose or scabrous toward base, base with conspicuous white rhizomorphs, (Guzman(1)), 3-8cm x 0.2-0.6(0.8)cm, equal or with widened base, sometimes curved; whitish but staining blue to bluish-green when handled or bruised; dry, (Arora)
Veil:
partial veil "copiously cortinate, snow-white, rapidly deteriorating to an obscure annular zone, if at all", (Stamets), cortinate and well-developed, delicate and white when young, "evanescent in the adults or the remnants remains [sic]", fibrillose in upper part of stem, no ring, (Guzman(1)), "fibrillose or cobwebby, copious but disappearing or at most forming a very slight ring or hairy zone on stalk", (Arora)
Odor:
farinaceous especially when young (Guzman(1)), none (Miller), "mild, farinaceous or earthy" (Siegel)
Taste:
farinaceous especially when young (Guzman(1)), bitter or farinaceous (Siegel)
Microscopic spores:
spores 9-12 x 5-9 microns, elongate-elliptic; basidia 4-spored; pleurocystidia not reported by Wakefield, but collections in Pacific Northwest have abundant capitate pleurocystidia 17-33 x 5-8.8 microns, fusoid-ventricose to subpyriform [somewhat pear-shaped], sometimes mucronate [tipped with an abrupt short point], more common near gill edges, cheilocystidia (12)16-27(30) x (5)6.6-8.8 microns, sublageniform [more or less flask-shaped] to fusoid-ventricose, cylindric at base with extended singly or split neck 6 x 1.5-3.5 microns, (Stamets), spores (8.8)11-13.2(15.4) x (6)6.6-7.7(8.5) x 5.5-7 microns, elongate-elliptic in face and side view, thick-walled (0.1-0.5 microns), dark yellowish brown, with distinct broad germ pore; basidia 4-spored, rarely 2-spored, 20-27(36) x 7-8.5(11) microns, colorless, "vesiculose-subpyriform, sometimes with a slight median constriction"; pleurocystidia not so abundant, more frequently near gill edge, 17-33 x 4.9-8.8 microns, "fusoid-ventricose or subpyriform but all the time mucronate, rarely with more or less long neck", cheilocystidia abundant, (12)16-27(30) x (5)6.6-8.8 microns, colorless, "sublageniform to fusoid-ventricose, rarely pedicellate or with a more or less long cylindrical base, with a long neck, bifurcate or simple", up to 6 x 1.5-3.5 microns; clamp connections very common, (Guzman(1)), spores 11-12(16) x (6)6.5-7(8) x (6)6.5-7 microns, elliptic, thick-walled, wall up to 1.5 microns thick; pleurocystidia common, 17-30 x (4)5.5-8(9) microns, "clavate or narrowly subglobose, both with a short cylindrical apex", cheilocystidia 18-29 x 5.5-7 microns, "sublageniform or narrowly utriform, sometimes branched", (Guzman(4) for BC collection), spores 9-12 x 5-9, elliptic, smooth; chrysocystidia absent on gills, (Arora)
Spore deposit:
dark purplish brown (Stamets), dark brown violet or fuscous (Guzman(1)), "purple-brown to purple-gray or purple-black", (Arora)
Notes:
Collections were examined from BC, WA, OR, CA, United Kingdom (Scotland), and the Netherlands, (Guzman).
EDIBILITY
potent hallucinogen, especially raw, only one or two caps needed to alter perception and sensation, (Arora), 0.3-1.7% psilocybin, 0.28-0.51% psilocin, 0.02-0.03% baeocystin, (Stamets)

Habitat and Range

SIMILAR SPECIES
Psilocybe azurescens has a cap that is hemispheric when young, convex when mature, never wavy, and when mature broadly to acutely umbonate, has a stem 9-20cm long, usually with a cortinate zone, and fruits late September through April. Psilocybe allenii has a cap that is hemispheric when young, convex when mature, only rarely wavy in very mature specimens, and never umbonate, has a stem 4-7(9)cm long that usually has a cortinate zone, and fruits mid-September through January. In comparison to those two species, P. cyanescens has a cap that is hemispheric when young, soon becoming more or less wavy, the cap rarely umbonate and never acutely umbonate, has a stem (4)6-9(11)cm long that lacks a cortinate zone on the stem, and fruits from late September through April. Compared with P. cyanescens, P. allenii also has a thinner stem, thinner cap context, and slightly darker cap color. P. azurescens "is known to occur naturally only in a small geographic area on the coast near the outlet of the Columbia River". (Borovicka). Psilocybe cyanofibrillosa has smaller spores, lacks clavate-mucronate pleurocystidia, and has cheilocystidia with very long necks which are often highly forked, often more than two times. (Borovicka). Psilocybe liniformans does not have pleurocystidia. Psilocybe baeocystis has a more conic cap that is usually olive-brown when young and a less copious veil. Psilocybe strictipes has a long slender stem (4-13cm x 0.2-0.3cm).
Habitat
scattered to gregarious "in humus enriched with woody debris, amongst leaves and twigs, in woodchips, sawdust, or in debris fields rich with rotting wood", often "under mixed woods at the edges of lawns, along paths, and in heavily mulched rhododendron and rose gardens", grows well with rhododendrons, azaleas, lupines, (Stamets), gregarious, rarely scattered, sometimes forming rings, on humus or on very rotten wood mixed with soil, or on sawdust or soil mulched containing wood chips or bark, in deciduous forests, but also very common in gardens and under bushes, very rarely in grasses, (Guzman(1)), widely scattered to densely gregarious "on wood chips, sawdust, mulch, and humus, and on lawns rich in lignin", "partial to conifer debris but also fond of alder and eucalyptus", (Arora), October to January (Miller), typically appears around the end of October with the onset of colder weather, (Trudell), they can grow together densely enough that their stem bases are jointed; appearing in fall and winter