Lepiota inflates (Lepiota magnispora)

Systematika:
  • Diviziona: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Fizarana: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Kilasy: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Kilasy: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Karazana: Agaricales (Agarika na Lamellar)
  • Fianakaviana: Agaricaceae (Champignon)
  • Genus: Lepiota (Lepiota)
  • Type: Lepiota magnispora (Lepiota magnispora)

Lepiota magnispora (Lepiota magnispora) sary sy famaritana

The cap of the lepiota bloater:

Small, 3-6 cm in diameter, convex-bell-shaped, hemispherical in youth, opens with age, while a characteristic tubercle remains in the center of the cap. The color of the cap is white-yellowish, beige, reddish, in the center there is a darker area. The surface is densely dotted with scales, especially noticeable along the edges of the cap. The flesh is yellowish, the smell of mushroom, pleasant.

Plates of lepiota vzdutosporeny:

Loose, frequent, rather wide, almost white when young, darkening to yellowish or light cream with age.

Spore powder of lepiota vzdutosporovoy:

White.

Leg of the lepiota inflated spore:

Quite thin, no more than 0,5 cm in diameter, 5-8 cm high, fibrous, hollow, with a rapidly disappearing inconspicuous ring, the color of the cap or darker in the lower part, all covered with coarse scales, darkening with age. The flesh of the lower part of the leg is also dark, reddish-brown. In young mushrooms, the stem is covered with an ocher flaky coating.

Mihanaka:

Inflated lepiota is rare in August-September in forests of various types, usually appearing in small groups.

Karazana mitovy:

All representatives of the genus Lepiota are similar to each other. Inflated lepiota is formally distinguished by an increased scaly stem and cap margins, but it is very difficult to clearly determine the type of fungus without microscopic examination.

According to some data, the mushroom is edible. According to others, it is inedible or even deadly poisonous. All sources report that the nutritional qualities of representatives of the genus Lepiota have been poorly studied.

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