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Plums & Custard

Tricholomopsis rutilans

Photo by LarsKorb
Published on Project Noah
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53.4757, 10.3673

Field Notes

Description:

Plums and Custard takes its common name from its plum-red scaled cap and crowded custard yellow gills. The flesh is cream-coloured and spore print creamy white. The base colour of the cap under the scales is yellow. The cap is convex and 4–10 cm (1.5–4 in) across. The stipe (stem) is cylindrical and up to 10 cm (4 in) tall with a red scaly base developing to a yellow colour towards the cap. It has no ring or volva.

Habitat:

Tricholomopsis rutilans can be found growing on tree stumps and logs (especially those of spruce) in coniferous woodlands throughout the northern hemisphere, in places as diverse as Ireland, Bulgaria, Ukraine and North-West Russia, in late summer and autumn (June until November). It has also been found, probably accidentally introduced, in Australia and Costa Rica on introduced pine trees.

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (4)

Thanks Clive for the ID. Thanks also Leuba.
What a fantastic common name - so appropriate. Lovely!
Will do. Thanks for the directions, Alex.
take a look at "lepista pesonata (L. saeva)" --> rare with the purple cap OR "russula turci (r. amethystina)"--> rare with purple stem. All two are with sometimes purple cap / stem. hope it will be helpfull, maybe at least this: try in the genus russula,lactarius (fuscus),or lepista.
Photographed
PublishedOctober 1, 2011

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