New Zealand Fungarium - Te Kohinga Hekaheka o Aotearoa
Barcode:
PDD 106939
Specimen type:
Packet
Database record added:
13 November 2018
Database record updated:
19 August 2022
Components
Primary component
Active identification
Determined name:
Conocybe subcrispa aff.
Determiner:
J.A. Cooper
Identification date:
2021 (Verbatim: 2021)
Preferred name:
Conocybe subcrispa (Murrill) Singer
Division:
Basidiomycota
Class:
Agaricomycetes
Order:
Agaricales
Family:
Bolbitiaceae
Identification type:
Determination
Substrate:
boggy ground
Other identifications
Identification
Determined name:
Bolbitius
Determiner:
G. Smith
Identification date:
Preferred name:
Bolbitius Fr.
Active:
no
Identification type:
Determination
Identification
Determined name:
Conocybe
Determiner:
J.A. Cooper
Identification date:
2018 (Verbatim: 2018)
Preferred name:
Conocybe Fayod
Active:
no
Identification type:
Determination
Collection events
Primary collection event
Collection event type:
Field
Standard locality
Location:
Ashhurst Domain, Ashhurst
Verbatim locality:
Ashhurst Domain, Ashhurst
Verbatim collector:
G. Smith
Standardised collector:
Grey Smith
Verbatim date:
2018/2/21
Start date:
2018-02-21
Country:
New Zealand
New Zealand Area Codes:
Wanganui
Native lands:
Ngāti Kahungunu
Ngāti Raukawa ki te Tonga
Ngāti Toa Rangatira
Rangitāne
Georeferences:
Latitude and Longitude (WGS84):
-40.30316 175.758355
Habitat:
Broadleaved forest
Specimen notes
Public Note:
[GS] Small fragile mushrooms growing in damp/boggy ground in a native broadleaf forest remnant. Caps to 20 mm across, creamy-tan with a slight umbo, radially striate. Gills initially cream, becoming tan with age. Stems up to 90 mm long, white, pruinose, vertically grooved, tending to taper towards the apex. [JAC] 4-spored, 12 x 7 ellipsoid, broad germ pore, thick-walled, hyphae unclamped, no pseudoparaphyses, no lecythiform elements anywhere. Microscopically this more the aspect of Bolbitius (like B. lacteus) and not Conocybe sections candidae or pilosellae (c. apala, C. lactea) but not conclusive. I don't see many of this group so not sure. Let's see what a sequence says. Possibly Watling's B. sp.2.
G. Smith, J.A. Cooper