Agaricus impudicus explained

Agaricus impudicus, also known as the tufted wood mushroom, is a mushroom of Agaricus, a genus with many edible species.[1]

Description

As with all Agaricus species, gills are free, colour progresses with age from pale-pink to a chocolate color, and spores are dark brown. The stipe has a clear annulus (ring).

Cap 4–15 cm wide, and appears brownish due to numerous brownish scales on a white background. The stipe is white, 6–12 cm tall and 0.8–2 cm thick, cylindrical and wider towards the bottom, or ending in a bulb.

It is distinguished from similar forest-growing Agaricus mushrooms in that it does not bruise yellowish or reddish when cut, except for the attachment of stalk and cap which may turn slightly pink, and the widening stipe. Taste is mild and earthy, and the mushroom is sometimes regarded as edible; however, other authors treat it as inedible in practice if not in theory because it has a nauseating smell resembling rotten radish, which persists during cooking.

Habitat

Known to occur in Western and Southern Europe and New Zealand, this uncommon mushroom is found in deciduous or coniferous forest in autumn.

Taxonomy

This species is known under a number of synonyms, all these refer to the same species:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Soliman . Gaziea . Elkhateeb2 . Waill . Wen . Ting-Chi . Daba . Ghoson . 7 March 2022 . Mushrooms as efficient biocontrol agents against the root-knot nematode, meloidogyne incognita . Egyptian Pharmaceutical Journal . 21 . 1 . 68-74.