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Old 05-08-05, 11:38   #13 (permalink)
dudicus
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Join Date: Apr 2005
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Look a likes

Quote:
Originally Posted by dudicus
Nice pics.
So how unique are Liberty Caps I can't say I have seen other muchrooms that really look like them.
Wow I obviously didn't read the whole post.
There are a few “look-a likes”; Panaeolina foenisecii, not toxic and different Inocybe mushrooms, some to be toxic (light).
Here is a site with pics from Panaeolina Foenisecii:
http://www.mushroomjohn.com/panaeolinafoenisecii1.htm
If anyone knows any other mushrooms that are look a likes, specifically ones to be toxic Please chime in.

Quote:
Cap: Campanulate to convex with an incurved margin in the young, expanding to broadly convex with age, sometimes conical and usually zonate (bands or zones of reddish-brown colors or zones frunning from the outer edges of the cap towards the center of the cap). Smokey brown to dull chestnut brown. Hygrophanous and cap skin craking in age or in drying.

Gills:Adnate and soon seceding, close and moderately broad, dark brown and slightly mottled from the uneven ripening of spores.

Stem:40 to80 mm long by 2-3.5 mm thick. Equal, brittle, pruinose and slightly striate and twisted towards the apex. Pallid to whitish and darkening from the base upwards with age. Veil obscure or absent.

Spores:12-17 x 7-9 microns. roughened.

Sporeprintark brown, not black in deposit.

Habitat: Lawns and grassy areas

Distribution: Cosmopolitan appearing scattered to gregarious in lawns and grassy areas around the world, but not in dung.

Season: Fruiting abundantly in the early spring to summer and again in the fall months

Dosage: This species is not psychoactive and never has been. Some analyses have claimed this species as psilocyian but this was because of mixed collections placed together on herbarium sheets (see Allen and Merlin's article:
Observations Regarding the Suspected Psychoactive Properties of Panaeolina foenisecii Maire.

Comment: This species is very close macroscopically to Panaeolus subbalteatus except it is smaller and does not have verticle white grooves runing up and down the stem and it does not stain blue. This species is common in lawns and is known throughout the globe as the "hay Mower's" Mushroom.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg idspeciespnfoenisecii1.jpg (19.8 KB, 26 views)

Last edited by Hippie3; 05-01-06 at 22:18.
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