Twig rot (Marasmius ramealis)

ប្រព័ន្ធ៖
  • ផ្នែក៖ Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • ផ្នែករង៖ អាហ្គារីកូម៉ីកូទីណា (Agaricomycetes)
  • ថ្នាក់៖ Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • ប្រភេទរង៖ Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • លំដាប់: Agaricales (Agaric ឬ Lamellar)
  • គ្រួសារ៖ Marasmiaceae (Negniuchnikovye)
  • ពូជ៖ Marasmius (Negnyuchnik)
  • ប្រភេទ: Marasmius ramealis

Twig rot (Marasmius ramealis) – a mushroom belonging to the Tricholomov family, the genus Marasmiellus.

The pulp of the fruiting body of twig marasmiellus is springy, very thin, of the same color, without any shades. The mushroom consists of a cap and a stem. The diameter of the cap varies between 5-15 mm. In its form, it is convex, in mature mushrooms it has a noticeable depression in the central part and becomes flat, prostrate. Along the edges, it often has small, barely noticeable grooves and irregularities. The color of the cap of this mushroom is pinkish-white, in the central part it is necessarily darker than at the edges.

The leg is 3-20 mm in diameter, the color is the same as the cap, its surface is noticeably darker downwards, covered with a layer of “dandruff”, often curved, near the base it is thinner, has fluff.

Mushroom hymenophore – lamellar type. Its constituent components are thin and sparsely located plates, often adhering to the surface of the mushroom stem. They are white in color, sometimes slightly pinkish. The spore powder is characterized by a white color, and the spores themselves are colorless, characterized by an oblong and elliptical shape.

The twig rot (Marasmius ramealis) prefers to grow in colonies, settling on fallen, dead tree branches and old, rotten stumps. Its active fruiting continues from the very beginning of summer until the onset of winter.

The small size of the fruiting body of the twig non-rotten fungus does not allow one to classify the fungus as an edible species. However, there are no toxic components in the composition of its fruiting bodies, and this mushroom cannot be called poisonous. Some mycologists classify the twig rot as an inedible, little-studied mushroom.

The twig rot has little resemblance to the fungus Marasmiellus vaillantii.

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