HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Marasmius cohaerens'' is a species of gilled mushroom which is fairly common in European woods.


Description

This section uses the given references throughout. The matt or slightly felted cap grows from about 1 cm to 3.5 cm, and can be pale brown, yellow brown or chocolate brown, sometimes also with a pink tinge. The shape develops with age from campanulate to flat. There is no ring or other veil remnant. The stem is about 5 to 9 cm long and up to 0.5 cm in diameter and varies from dark brown at the base to whitish at the top with some ochraceous to reddish colour in the middle. It has a distinctive shiny and horny consistency. The
adnate Adnate may refer to: * Adnation, in botany, the fusion of two or more whorls of a flower * Adnate, in mycology, a classification of lamellae (gills) * Conjoined twins Conjoined twins – sometimes popularly referred to as Siamese twins – are ...
to almost free gills are quite distant and have a cream to brownish colour with a darker brown edge and there are tiny hairs on the edge which can be seen with a hand-lens. The taste is mild and there is little smell. The spores are ellipsoid to almond-shaped and are around 8-10.5 µm by 4–5.5 µm. There are cheilocystidia which take a broadly club-shaped form with finger-like protrusions at the far end; such cells are known as "broom cells of the siccus type" (see '' Marasmius siccus'').


Distribution, habitat, ecology and human impact

This saprobic mushroom grows singly or in small groups on humus and litter in beech forests or with other deciduous trees and (only occasionally) in coniferous forests. It is widely distributed and fairly common in Europe, and in eastern Asia. It also occurs though rarely in North America, and there other varieties have been identified (the European one being ''M. cohaerens'' var. ''cohaerens'').


Naming

This species was originally described by the mycologist
Christiaan Hendrik Persoon Christiaan Hendrik Persoon (1 February 1761 – 16 November 1836) was a German mycologist who made additions to Linnaeus' mushroom taxonomy. Early life Persoon was born in South Africa at the Cape of Good Hope, the third child of an immig ...
in 1801 as ''Agaricus cohaerens''. Then in 1878 in a common work published in London, Mordecai Cubitt Cooke and Lucien Quélet assigned the current name which has remained the same for over 100 years. The Latin epithet ''cohaerens'' has the same origin as the English word "coherent" and means "keeping together" (i.e. it is difficult to pull the mushroom apart).


References


Links

* * * {{Taxonbar, from=Q10505243 cohaerens Taxa named by Christiaan Hendrik Persoon