Hygrophorus pudorinus
Key to Gilled Mushrooms KeyThis is a key to gilled mushrooms, that is, mushrooms having a definite cap with a fertile surface consisting of gills. The fruiting body usually also has a stem, although that may be lateral or absent (usually, then, the mushroom is growing from wood). You can use this key to identify mushrooms that you find.
Agaricales OrderFruiting body containing fibers (usually in the stalk)
White Spored SuborderSpore print "light-colored": white or buff, sometimes tinged with pink or tan. Greenish and (except for the Russulales) yellow spore prints also go here
Stalk fibrous, not fracturing like a piece of chalk
Hygrophoraceae FamilyGills (at least) with a distinct waxy or silky feel, due to unusually long basidia
No annulus, armilla or volva
Cap often slimy
They tend to grow in cold areas, and sometimes fruit at times when it's too cold for other mushrooms
Several have an insulating slimy universal veil. This veil leaves the cap and the stalk slimy, except for the upper stalk where the gills covered it when the mushroom was a button.
Hygrophorus GenusCap usually larger than 2" across; often viscid or slimy; usually white or dull colored
Stature usually robust
Stalk fleshy; only rarely hollow
Colorful Hygrophorus SectionCap colored white, greyish purple, pinkish, or just including some other coloration other than those listed for Dull Hygrophorus
Hygrophorus pudorinus (Fries) Fries
Here are the characters that distinguish this species from the others in its group. For its more general characters, see higher up on the page.
If there's just a few words or a microscopic feature here, a more thorough description can be found above.
Diagnosis
- Cap up to 4 1/2" across; pale pink to pinkish buff, sometimes with pale salmon tinges; viscid when moist
-
Odor and taste sometimes like turpentine
-
Gills usually subdecurrent; white or pale cap color
-
Stalk white or concolorous with cap; tacky; top with scurfy white stuff that darkens reddish in age or on drying and quickly turn golden in KOH
-
Usually under spruce; but also found under hemlock and in bogs
Microscropic Characters
Comments
There are several varieties of this species. Some smell fragrant rather than turpentine-like; others have no scent at all