Rhodocybe (sect. Rhodocybe) sect. Rhodocybe
Authors/Creators
- 1. Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology, University of Torino, Viale P. A. Mattioli
- 2. Via Roma 139, I- 81017 Sant' Angelo d'Alife (CE), Italy
- 3. P. O. Box 30041, 08034 Barcelona, Spain
- 4. Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology, University of Torino, Viale P. A. Mattioli & Via Marmilla 12, I- 07026 Olbia (OT), Italy & Department of Life Sciences and Systems Biology, University of Torino, Viale P. A. Mattioli
Description
1. Pileipellis with numerous globose elements................. R. praesidentialis Consiglio, Contu, M. Roy, Selosse & Vizzini (2007: 26)
‒ Pileipellis consisting only of cylindrical hyphae without globose or inflated elements....................................................................2
2. Spores subglobose to broadly ellipsoid..............................................................................................................................................3
‒ Spores ellipsoid to amygdaliform.......................................................................................................................................................4
3. Spores (5‒)5.5‒6.5(‒7.6) × (4.2‒)4.5‒5.5(‒6) μm, Q = 1.16‒1.38, pileus up to 55 mm broad, context unchanging when bruised, lamellae medium crowded, grey to brown.......................................................................................... R. formosa (= R. minutispora)
‒ Spores 5.7‒8 × 4.5‒5.9 μm, Q = 1.1‒1.5, pileus up to 25 mm broad, context darkening to blackish when old or bruised, lamellae quite distant, dark grey............................................................................................................................................. R. griseonigrella
4. Light blue to violaceous tinges present at least at stipe apex and well-developed cylindrical caulocystidia................. R. ardosiaca
‒ Stipe without violaceous tinges and caulocystidia.............................................................................................................................5
5. Basidiomes slender, fragile, conical-convex pileus with argillaceous to pale brown tinges (white in var. virgineopusilla), unpleasant smell and taste (like rotten fish), large spores, 7.5‒10 × 4.5‒5.5 μm....................................................................... R. obtusatula
‒ Basidiomes less fragile, with different smell and smaller spores.......................................................................................................6
6. Pileus at first covered with abundant white pruina (as a micaceous sheen).......................................................................................7
‒ Pileus without white pruina................................................................................................................................................................9
7. Pileus 6–18 mm broad, conico-convex to conical, with a broad obtuse umbo, bright yellow-brown, dark brown at centre, not cracked, lamellae yellow-brown...................................... Clitopilus djellouliae Contu, Vizzini, P. Roux & Guy Garcia (2011: 158)
‒ Pileus 4–30 mm broad, convex, soon convex-depressed, without umbo, dark grey, greysh- brown, minutely cracked, lamellae grey.....................................................................................................................................................................................................8
8. Pseudocystidia abundant, 40–70 × 6–8 μm......................................................................................................................... R. caelata
‒ Pseudocystidia rare, 30–40 × 3–4 μm.................................................................................................................................... R. dubia
9. Pileus blackish brown, spores, 6.8‒9 × (5.7‒)6.2‒7.5 μm and large basidia, 32‒44 × 9.5‒13.5 μm, pseudocystidia up to 13 μm wide, filled with colourless contents in KOH, and growth in dwarf shrubs in tundra.............................................. R. finnmarchiae
‒ Not as above.....................................................................................................................................................................................10
10. Spores oblong to subfusiform, Q = 1.7‒2.1............................................ Clitopilus marinaensis Vila, Contu & F. Caball. (2009: 9).
‒ Spores ellipsoid or amygdaliform, Q ≤ 1.7......................................................................................................................................11
11. Pileus 10‒15 mm broad, spores ellipsoid, pseudocystidia non-septate with strongly dextrinoid contents..................... R. oss-emeri
‒ Pileus 20‒30 mm broad, spores amygdaliform, rare uniseptate pseudocystidia present, pseudocystidia with only weakly dextrinoid contents.............................................................................................................................................................................. R. brunnea
Notes
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Linked records
Additional details
Identifiers
Related works
- Is part of
- Journal article: 10.11646/phytotaxa.255.1.3 (DOI)
- Journal article: http://zenodo.org/record/13675306 (URL)
- Journal article: http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC3A865BA0AA97ED02BFFB5FFF7FFCF (URL)
- Is source of
- https://sibils.text-analytics.ch/search/collections/plazi/03FAD01DBA03A974D0A3FAF8FA5CFE8A (URL)
Biodiversity
- Kingdom
- Fungi
- Phylum
- Basidiomycota
- Order
- Agaricales
- Family
- Entolomataceae
- Genus
- Rhodocybe
- Taxon rank
- section