dcsimg

Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Inocybe rimosoides Peck, Bull. N. Y
State Mus. 150:32. 1911.
Pileus thin, subconic to broadly campanulate, subexpanded or repand, the umbo prominent, often subacute, 2-4 cm. broad; surface dry, innately silky-fibrillose, shining, radially longrimose, splitting on the margm, maize-yellow (R) to chamois (R) ; context white, moist; lamellae sinuate-adnexed or almost free, sometimes subdecurrent by a tooth, narrow, crowded, whitish then avellaneous to rusty-cinnamon, the edges white-fimbriate; stipe slender, equal or with subbulbous base, strict, solid at first, soon hollowed by grubs, pruinose at the apex, glabrous elsewhere, pallid, whitish within, 2.5-6 cm. long, 2-4 mm. thick; spores subreniform, elliptic, smooth, obtuse at both ends, 8-9 (-10) X 4.5-5 ju; cystidia none; sterile cells clavate, on the edges of the lamellae.
Type locality: Menands, New York.
Habitat: In grassy places and open woods.
Distribution : New England to North Carolina, and westward to Michigan.
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bibliographic citation
William Alphonso Murrill, Calvin Henry Kauffman, Lee Oras Overholts. 1924. (AGARICALES); AGARICACEAE (pars); AGARICEAE (pars), INOCYBE, PHOLIOTA. North American flora. vol 10(4). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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