Luscious dreamer
Luscious dreamer | ||||||||||||
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Luscious Trüsselling ( Stropharia hornemannii ) |
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Systematics | ||||||||||||
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Scientific name | ||||||||||||
Stropharia hornemannii | ||||||||||||
( Fr .: Fr. ) S.Lundell & Nannf. |
The lush Trüsselling ( Stropharia hornemannii ) is a type of mushroom from the genus of the Trümmlinge ( Stropharia ). The epithet honors Jens Wilken Hornemann .
features
The lush Trüsselling forms large fruiting bodies with a 5 to 12 cm wide hat and 8 to 15 cm long and 1 to 2.5 cm thick stalk. The hat surface is ivory, ocher, gray, flesh or pink-brown. The hat skin is very slimy when it is moist. The whitish-yellowish colored stem is quite long, covered with scales and has a grooved, ephemeral ring . The lamellae are whitish when young, purple-gray as they ripen and turn dark brown when the spores are ripe.
ecology
The Lush Trüsselling grows as a saprobiont on heavily rotten wood, it prefers acidic spruce and spruce-fir forests, it is rarely found in parks and on the edges of forests. The substrate is mostly coniferous wood, and hardwood is very rarely colonized. The fruiting bodies appear from September to November.
distribution
The Lush Trüsselling is a boreal type of fungus found in the Nordic coniferous forests. It occurs in the Caucasus, North America and Europe. In Europe, it was found in Romania, Italy, Belgium, Austria, Germany, Estonia, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland. In more southerly areas of its range it is very rare and grows mainly montane to subalpine. The species is very rare in Germany and is considered to be latently endangered due to its rarity.
meaning
The voluptuous dreamer is suspicious of poison.
swell
- Hans E. Laux: The great cosmos mushroom guide. All edible mushrooms with their poisonous doppelgangers. Franckh-Kosmos, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-440-08457-4 .
- German Josef Krieglsteiner (Ed.), Andreas Gminder : Die Großpilze Baden-Württemberg . Volume 4: Mushrooms. Blattpilze II. Ulmer, Stuttgart 2003, ISBN 3-8001-3281-8 .
- Josef Breitenbach, Fred Kränzlin (Ed.): Mushrooms of Switzerland. Contribution to knowledge of the fungal flora in Switzerland. Volume 4: Agarics. Part 2: Entolomataceae, Pluteaceae, Amanitaceae, Agaricaceae, Coprinaceae, Bolbitiaceae, Strophariaceae. Mykologia, Luzern 1995, ISBN 3-85604-040-4 .