Clitocybe strigosa

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Clitocybe strigosa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Agaricales
Family: Clitocybaceae
Genus: Clitocybe
Species:
C. strigosa
Binomial name
Clitocybe strigosa
Harmaja (1969)

Clitocybe strigosa is a species of mushroom-forming fungus first described by the Finnish mycologist Harri Harmaja in 1969. It is characterized by its chestnut to greyish-brown, hygrophanous cap, pale yellow spore print with a faint greyish tint, and cyanophilic spores that readily absorb blue dyes due to their mucilaginous outer layer. This saprotrophic fungus grows in coniferous and deciduous forests, often in deep moss carpets under spruce or beech, and occasionally on calcareous heaths above the tree line. The species shows a disjunct distribution in Fennoscandia, occurring in both alpine, calcareous zones and southern boreal lowland zones.

Clitocybe strigosa was described as new to science by the Finnish mycologist Harri Harmaja in 1969. The holotype was collected on 15 October 1965 in a grass–herb forest under spruce at Jalassaari, rural district of Lohja, Southern Finland, by Harri Toppari (now Harmaja); an isotype (duplicate) is preserved at the herbarium of the University of Michigan.[1]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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