Cuphophyllus pratensis

{{Short description|Species of fungus}}

{{Speciesbox

| image = 2010-11-20 Cuphophyllus pratensis.jpg

| taxon = Cuphophyllus pratensis

| authority = (Schaeff.) Bon (1985)

| synonyms_ref=

| synonyms = *Agaricus pratensis {{Small|Schaeff. (1774)}}

  • Hygrophorus pratensis {{small|(Schaeff.) Fr.) (1836)}}
  • Camarophyllus pratensis {{small|(Schaeff.) P.Kumm. (1871)}}
  • Hygrophorus karstenii {{small|Sacc. & Cub. (1887)}}
  • Hygrocybe pratensis {{small|(Schaeff.) Murrill (1914)}}

}}

{{Mycomorphbox

| name = {{PAGENAME}}{{italic title}}

| hymeniumType = gills

| capShape = umbonate

| capShape2 = depressed

| whichGills = decurrent

| stipeCharacter = bare

| sporePrintColor = white

| ecologicalType = mycorrhizal

| howEdible = choice

| howEdible2 = edible

}}

Cuphophyllus pratensis is a species of agaric (gilled mushroom) in the family Hygrophoraceae. It has been given the recommended English name of meadow waxcap in the UK and in North America has variously been called the meadow waxy cap, salmon waxy cap, and butter meadowcap.

The species has a widespread, mainly temperate distribution, occurring in grassland in Europe and in woodland elsewhere. The basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are edible and are occasionally collected and sold commercially.

Taxonomy

The species was first described in 1774 by the German mycologist and naturalist Jacob Christian Schäffer as Agaricus pratensis. It was subsequently combined in a number of different genera, before being transferred to Hygrocybe in 1914. The specific epithet comes from Latin "pratensis" (= growing in meadows). Molecular research, based on cladistic analysis of DNA sequences, has found that Hygrocybe pratensis does not belong in Hygrocybe sensu stricto but to the genus Cuphophyllus.

Description

The basidiocarps are agaricoid. The cap is convex at first, becoming flat, umbonate, or slightly depressed when expanded, up to {{Convert|6|cm|frac=4}} across.{{Cite book |last=Audubon |title=Mushrooms of North America |publisher=Knopf |year=2023 |isbn=978-0-593-31998-7 |pages=392}} The cap surface is smooth and dry, pale salmon to orange-buff. The lamellae (gills) are waxy, pale, and decurrent (widely attached to and running down the stipe). The stipe (stem) is up to {{Convert|7|cm|abbr=on|frac=4}} long, smooth, cylindrical or tapering to the base, and creamy in colour. The flesh is whitish with a mild smell and taste (sometimes unpleasant). The spore print is white, the spores (under a microscope) smooth, inamyloid, ellipsoid, about 5.5 to 6.5 by 4.0 to 5.0 μm.

=Similar species=

Cuphophyllus berkeleyi is very similar, but fruit bodies are white (sometimes being considered a variety of C. pratensis). The placeholder species C. graveolens is similar, as is C. colemannianus. Hygrophorus nemoreus is an ectomycorrhizal species, growing in woodland with oaks, and has a distinctly mealy smell. There is also H. pudorinus.

Distribution and habitat

The meadow waxcap has a widespread distribution, mainly occurring in temperate zones. It has been recorded in Europe, North Africa, North and South America, northern Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. Like other waxcaps, it grows in old, unimproved, short-sward grassland (pastures and lawns) in Europe, but in woodland elsewhere. Recent research suggests waxcaps are neither mycorrhizal nor saprotrophic but may be associated with mosses.

Conservation

In Europe, C. pratensis is typical of waxcap grasslands, a declining habitat due to changing agricultural practices. Though the species is one of the commoner members of the genus, it nonetheless appears on the official or provisional national red lists of threatened fungi in a few European countries, including the Czech Republic, Germany (Bavaria), and Poland.

Edibility

The fruit bodies are edible{{cite book |last=Phillips |first=Roger |title=Mushrooms and Other Fungi of North America |year=2010 |origyear= 2005 |publisher=Firefly Books |location=Buffalo, NY |isbn=978-1-55407-651-2 |page=74}} and in some countries are seasonally collected for commercial sale in local markets.

References

{{Reflist|colwidth=30em|refs=

{{cite web |author=Holden L. |url=https://www.britmycolsoc.org.uk/resources/english-names/ |title=English names for fungi 2022 |date=April 2022 |publisher=British Mycological Society |accessdate=2022-12-06}}

{{cite book |author=Roody WC |year=2003 |title=Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |location=Lexington |isbn=978-0-8131-9039-6 |page=121 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5HGMPEiy4ykC&q=hygrophorus%20pratensis&pg=PA121}}

{{cite book |title=Mushrooms of the Southeastern United States |vauthors=Bessette AE, Roody WC, Bessette AR |year=2007 |publisher=Syracuse University Press |location=Syracuse, New York |isbn=978-0-8156-3112-5 |page=143 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IB1Gv3jZMmAC&q=collybia%20cookei&pg=PA143}}

{{Cite book |vauthors=McKnight VB, McKnight KH |title=A Field Guide to Mushrooms, North America |publisher=Houghton Mifflin |location=Boston |year=1987 |page=197 |isbn=978-0-395-91090-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kSdA3V7Z9WcC&q=Boletellus%20mirabilis&pg=PA197}}

{{cite book |title=British Basidiomycetaceae: A Handbook of the Larger British Fungi |author=Rea C. |author-link=Carleton Rea |year=1922 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |pages=799 }}

{{cite journal |vauthors=Babos M, Halász K, Zagyva T, Zöld-Balogh Á, Szegő D, Bratek Z |year=2011 |title=Preliminary notes on dual relevance of ITS sequences and pigments in Hygrocybe taxonomy |journal=Persoonia |volume=26 |pages=99–107 |doi=10.3767/003158511X578349|pmid=22025807 |pmc=3160800 }}

{{cite book |title=The genus Hygrocybe |edition=2nd |author=Boertmann D. |year=2010 |publisher=Danish Mycological Society |location=Copenhagen |pages=200 |isbn=978-87-983581-7-6}}

{{cite web |title=GSD Species Synonymy: Cuphophyllus pratensis (Pers.) Bon, Docums Mycol. 14(no. 56): 10 (1985) |url=http://www.speciesfungorum.org/GSD/GSDspecies.asp?RecordID=105223 |publisher=Species Fungorum |accessdate=2022-01-15}}

{{cite web |title=Global Biodiversity Information Facility: Hygrocybe pratensis |url=http://data.gbif.org/species/3345082/ |publisher=Global Biodiversity Information Facility |accessdate=2012-01-10}}

{{cite book |vauthors=Roberts P, Evans S |title=The Book of Fungi |year=2011 |publisher=Chicago University Press |location=Chicago, USA |pages=656 |isbn=978-0-226-72117-0}}

{{cite journal |vauthors=Seitzman BH, Ouimette A, Mixon RL, Hobbie EA, Hibbett DS |year=2011 |title=Conservation of biotrophy in Hygrophoraceae inferred from combined stable isotope and phylogenetic analyses |journal=Mycologia |volume=103 |issue=2 |pages=280–290 |doi=10.3852/10-195 |pmid=21139028|s2cid=318326 }}

{{cite web |title=Red list of fungi (macromycetes) of the Czech Republic |url=http://web.natur.cuni.cz/cvsm/ |publisher=Czech Scientific Society for Mycology |accessdate=2012-01-10}}

{{cite web |title=Rote Liste gefährdeter Großpilze Bayerns |url=http://www.lfu.bayern.de/natur/rote_liste_pilze/doc/roteliste_grosspilze.pdf |publisher=Bayerisches Landesamt für Umwelt |accessdate=2012-01-10 |archive-date=2019-08-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190824130322/https://www.lfu.bayern.de/natur/rote_liste_pilze/doc/roteliste_grosspilze.pdf |url-status=dead }}

{{cite web |title=Czerwona Lista grzybów Polski |url=http://www.grzyby.net/lista.htm |accessdate=2012-01-10 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425071726/http://www.grzyby.net/lista.htm |archivedate=2012-04-25 }}

}}

{{Taxonbar|from=Q934772}}

Category:Edible fungi

Category:Fungi of Asia

Category:Fungi of Australia

Category:Fungi of Europe

Category:Fungi of North America

Category:Taxa named by Jacob Christian Schäffer

Category:Hygrophoraceae

Category:Fungi described in 1774

Category:Fungi of New Zealand

Category:Fungi of South America

Category:Fungus species