Xeromphalina campanella

Folksy Glöckchennabeling ( Xeromphalina campanella )

The inedible Convivial Glöckchennabeling ( Xeromphalina campanella, syn. Omphalina campanella ) is a species of fungus in the family of Mycena relatives ( Mycenaceae ). The fruiting bodies appear in the early spring to autumn. They usually grow on rotting conifer stumps.

  • 5.1 Notes and references

Features

Macroscopic characteristics

The dünnfleischige hat is 0.5-2 cm wide, rounded young and umbilicated in the center and bent funnel-shaped in age. The smooth, greasy shiny surface is yellow brown to brownish orange. The hub usually has a darker color, and the edge is serrated translucent to near Hutmitte.

The pretty remotely located, narrow crescent-shaped blades run down briefly on a stick. You are at the bottom queraderig connected and similar brownish yellow like the hat colored or slightly lighter. The spore powder is cremeweißlich and amyloid.

The cartilaginous and often bent stalk is 1.5-3 cm long and 0.1-0.2 cm wide. It is yellowish at the top and the base darker colored rusty brown to black-brown. The more or less striegelige stem base with a yellowish Mycelfilz feinfilzig exaggerated and sometimes slightly bulbous. In the age of the stem is usually hollow. The meat is thin and light brownish. It tastes mild and somewhat mushroom-like, the smell is normal.

Microscopic characteristics

The elliptical spores are 5.5-8 microns long and 3-4 microns wide.

Artabgrenzung

The Folksy Glöckchennabeling can be easily confused with other species of its genus. He falls to the fact that it often grows on dead grassy and mossy coniferous stumps.

The Yellow Glöckchennabeling ( Xeromphalina fellea ) tastes bitter and growing in soil in a coniferous forest, while the Orange-Red Heftelnabeling ( Ricke Ella fibula ) occurs on the ground between mosses. He has very large, conspicuous cystidia that are already clearly visible with a magnifying glass.

Ecology and distribution

The fruiting bodies of the social Glöckchennabelings from July to October rotten softwood stumps, sometimes one usually finds them but from March. The fungus grows sociable and often almost grassy. Especially in the mountains you can find it crowded on spruce stumps. In the lowlands, the species is quite rare.

Importance

The Folksy Glöckchennabeling is not edible mushroom.

Swell

  • Paul Kirk: Xeromphalina campanella. In: Species Fungorum. Accessed on 23 September 2013.
  • Xeromphalina campanella. In: MycoBank.org. International Mycological Association, accessed on 23 September 2013 ( English).
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