Bracelet web (Cortinarius armillatus)

Usoro:
  • Nkeji: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Nkebi: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Klas: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Klas: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Order: Agaricles (Agaric ma ọ bụ Lamellar)
  • Ezinụlọ: Cortinariaceae (Spiderwebs)
  • Genus: Cortinarius (Spiderweb)
  • ụdị: Cortinarius armillatus (Bracelet Webbed)

Ududo web (Cortinarius armillatus) foto na nkọwa

Ihe mgbaaka cobweb, (lat. Cortinarius bracelet) bụ ụdị ero nke sitere na genus Cobweb (Cortinarius) nke ezinụlọ Cobweb (Cortinariaceae).

Nwere:

Diameter 4-12 cm, neat hemispherical shape in youth, gradually opens with age, passing through the “cushion” stage; in the center, as a rule, a wide and obtuse tubercle is preserved. The surface is dry, orange to red-brown in color, covered with darker villi. Along the edges, remnants of a red-brown cobweb cover are often preserved. The flesh of the cap is thick, dense, brownish, with a musty smell characteristic of cobwebs and without much taste.

Ihe ndekọ:

Adherent, wide, relatively sparse, gray-cream in youth, only slightly brownish, then, as the spores mature, become rusty-brown.

Spore ntụ ntụ:

aja aja aja aja.

Ụkwụ:

Height 5-14 cm, thickness – 1-2 cm, somewhat lighter than the cap, slightly expanded towards the base. A characteristic feature is the bracelet-like remains of a cobweb cover (cortina) of a red-brown color covering the leg.

Kesaa:

The cobweb is found from the beginning of August until the end of the “warm autumn” in forests of various types (obviously, on poor acidic soils, but not a fact), forming mycorrhiza with both birch and, possibly, pine. Settles in damp places, along the edges of swamps, on hummocks, in mosses.

Ụdị ndị eyitere:

Cortinarius armillatus is one of the few easily identifiable cobwebs. A large fleshy hat covered with brown scales and a leg with characteristic bright bracelets are signs that will not allow an attentive naturalist to make a mistake. A very poisonous beautiful cobweb (Cortinarius speciosissimus), they say, it looks like it, but only experienced specialists and a few victims have seen it. They say he is smaller, and his belts are not so bright.

 

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