dcsimg

Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Inocybe subfulva Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y
State Mus. 41: 66. 1888.
Inocybe echinocarpa Ellis & Ev. Jour. Myc. 5: 26. 1889.
Pileus thin, broadly subconic, soon convex, subumbonate to umbonate, 1-2.5 cm. broad; surface dry, with dense-appressed-fibrillose scales, cinnamon -brown to ochraceoustawny ; context white; lamellae adnexed, rounded behind, subventricose, dose, whitish at first, then tawny cinnamon, the edges entire ; stipe equal, firm, solid, tough, pruinose at the apex, slightly fibrillose below, concolorous or paler, 2-5 cm. long, 2-3 mm. thick; spores subglobose or shortelliptic, not angular, covered equally with spines which are subacute, broader at the base, sometimes slightly stouter and more obtuse, 10-12 (-13) X 9-10 (-11) n; genuine cystidia none; sterile cells cyst-like, clavate to subventricose, obtuse, short, widely scattered on the hymenium 36 X 10-12 m; basidia 28-30 X 8-10 /*,
Type locality: Selkirk, New York.
Habitat: In the grass or on the bare ground along roadsides.
Distribution : New England and New York to South Carolina and Mississippi.
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bibliographic citation
William Alphonso Murrill, Calvin Henry Kauffman, Lee Oras Overholts. 1924. (AGARICALES); AGARICACEAE (pars); AGARICEAE (pars), INOCYBE, PHOLIOTA. North American flora. vol 10(4). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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