Psathyrella

Tailed Mürbling ( Psathyrella corrugis )

The Mürblinge or fiber pieces ( Psathyrella ) is a fungal genus in the family Mürblingsverwandten. The species are of no interest to mushroom pickers in general and difficult to determine, however, sometimes very often.

Features

Macroscopic characteristics

The often hygrophane hat is initially bell-shaped, the edge is never curled. The hat always sits centrally on the stalk. This is good Breakaway. The slats are usually free or grown and not piebald. The spore powder is dark, usually black or at least dyed brown.

To distinguish the different species in younger fruiting instances more vivid color, any Hygrophanität and the remains of a possibly existing sub shell are often often particularly helpful.

Microscopic characteristics

Are often decisive for the distinction of the externally often quite similar Mürblingsarten. The spores have a smooth surface with a germ pore significant.

Species delimitation

Mürblinge differ from fertilizer Lingen ( Panaeolus ) usually caused by fading in concentrated sulfuric acid spores. When representatives of the genera Coprinellus and Coprinopsis the hats of the fruiting body digest itself Another similar genus Coprinus.

Ecology

The Mürblinge feed all saprophytic.

History

Today's group was established in 1838 by Elias Magnus Fries as Agaricus tribus his all-encompassing and in 1872 charged by Lucien Quélet to the rank of a genus. The name derives from a diminutive of Psathyra from the Greek word psathuros ( ψαθυρος ), which means " bratbar ".

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