Agaricus excellens explained
Agaricus excellens (French: Psaliote Excellente, German: Riesen-Egerling)[1] is a rare European mushroom in the genus Agaricus.
Description
- Cap: It is whitish yellow in color. Spread over NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) across, it is convex and a bit flat, yellowing slightly at the center especially with age, and densely covered in minute fibrous scales of the same colour. It feels silky.[2]
- Stem / Stipe: Stem is NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches) by NaNcm (-2,147,483,648inches), white in color; the ring is thick and white. The underside is scaly or fibrillar.[2]
- Gills: The gills are pale-pink and free.[2]
- Spores and microscopic features: Spore print is purplish black. Spores are elliptic, measuring 9–12 x 5–7 μ.[2]
- Flesh and smell: The cap flesh is reddish-white. It tastes sweet and a bit like mushroom, smells slightly of aniseed and almond.[2]
Distribution and habitat
Native to Europe, the species is commonly found in coniferous and deciduous areas and grows during late autumn to summer amongst grass in open woodland, especially spruce. It is typically found at altitudes of NaNfeet.[1]
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Agaricus excellens . Zipcode Zoo . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121009014008/http://zipcodezoo.com/Fungi/A/Agaricus_excellens/ . 2012-10-09 .
- Web site: Agaricus excellens. MushLook . https://web.archive.org/web/20120402224053/http://www.klobuk.com/p/103/agaricus-excellens . April 2, 2012.