-
attachment to the stem. This
general form has
given rise to the term
collybioid,
which is
still in use to
describe this type of
fruit body. The type species...
- caerulescens,
found in the US and Venezuela, is also
somewhat similar, but has a
collybioid habit (small to medium-sized
mushrooms with a
convex cap), with spores...
- are small- to medium-sized, with a
morphology ranging from ****ocyboid,
collybioid, mycenoid, pleurotoid, to omphalinoid.
Gills are decurrent, and the stipe...
- Antonín, V.; Noordeloos, M. E. (2010). A
monograph of
marasmioid and
collybioid fungi in Europe. Berchtesgaden, DE: IHW Verlag. p. 84. ISBN 978-3-930167-72-2...
-
usually whitish or the same
color as the gills. This type of agaric,
collybioid mushroom has pale
spore deposits which range from
pinkish buff to pinkish...
- Québec, Canada, was
described as a new
species in 2013.
Unlike the
mostly collybioid fruit bodies of most
other Entocybe species, E. melleogrisea has a tricholomatoid...
-
Species in the
genus have
fruit bodies with caps that are mycenoid,
collybioid, or
omphaloid in form. Most
species occur in
tropical and subtropical...
- as
Collybia amethystina,
which was
probably due in part to its
tough collybioid-like stem. Its
present binomial places it in the
genus Laccaria, with...
- Antonín, V.; Noordeloos, M. E. (2010). A
monograph of
marasmioid and
collybioid fungi in Europe. Berchtesgaden, DE: IHW Verlag. pp. 395–400. ISBN 978-3-930167-72-2...
- Antonín, V.; Noordeloos, M. E. (2010). A
monograph of
marasmioid and
collybioid fungi in Europe. Berchtesgaden, DE: IHW Verlag. pp. 400–407. ISBN 978-3-930167-72-2...