Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
have a reddish brown, rather than yellow-brown, cap. additionally, its stem is frequently somewhat club-shaped and its gills are often finely jagged--features not usually found in the straight-stemmed, even-gilled gymnopus dryophilus. some sources emphasize a difference in spore print color (pinkish for
rhodocollybia butyracea; white for gymnopus dryophilus), but the difference, which is minimal at best, requires a very thick spore print, natural lighting, and good eyes. the best means of separating the two species is microscopic; rhodocollybia butyracea features dextrinoid, rather than inamyloid,...
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