Light buff cobweb (Cortinarius claricolor)

Systematics:
  • Division: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Subdivision: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Class: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Subclass: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Order: Agaricales (Agaric or Lamellar)
  • Family: Cortinariaceae (Spiderwebs)
  • Genus: Cortinarius (Spiderweb)
  • Type: Cortinarius claricolor (Light buff cobweb)

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Light ocher cobweb (Cortinarius claricolor) photo and description

Cobweb light ocher (Cortinarius claricolor) is an agaric fungus of the Spiderweb family, belongs to the genus Cobwebs.

External Description

Light ocher cobweb (Cortinarius claricolor) is a mushroom with a dense and strong fruiting body. The color of the cap is light ocher or brownish. In young specimens, the edges of the cap are bent down. Then they open up, and the hat itself becomes flat.

The hymenophore is lamellar, and the plates of young fruiting bodies are covered with a light-colored coverlet, very similar to a cobweb (for this, the fungus got its name). As the mushrooms mature, the veil disappears, leaving a white trail around the edges of the cap. The plates themselves, after shedding the covers, are white in color, with time they become dark, similar in color to clay.

The leg of the ocher cobwebs is thick, fleshy, has a great length. In color, it is light, light ocher, in some specimens it is expanded at the bottom. On its surface, you can see the remains of the bedspread. Inside – full, dense and very juicy.

The mushroom pulp of the light ocher cobweb is often white, it can cast bluish-purple. Dense, juicy and tender. An interesting fact is that light ocher cobwebs are rarely attacked by insect larvae.

Light ocher cobweb (Cortinarius claricolor) photo and description

Grebe season and habitat

Cobweb light ocher (Cortinarius claricolor) grows mainly in groups, can form witch circles, 45-50 fruiting bodies. The mushroom looks appetizing, but rarely comes across mushroom pickers. It grows in dry coniferous forests dominated by pines. Such a fungus is also found in pine forests with minimal humidity. It likes to grow among white and green mosses, in open areas, near lingonberries. Fruits in September.

Edibility

Cobweb light ocher (Cortinarius claricolor) in official sources is called an inedible, slightly poisonous mushroom. However, experienced mushroom pickers who have tasted it say that the light ocher cobweb is very tasty and resilient. It must be boiled before use, and then fried. But it is still impossible to recommend this species for eating.

Similar types and differences from them

The fruiting bodies of young light buff cobwebs (Cortinarius claricolor) look like porcini mushrooms. True, there is a significant difference between both types. The hymenophore of the white fungus is tubular, while in the light ocher cobweb it is lamellar.

Other information about the mushroom

Light ocher cobwebs are a little-studied species of mushrooms, about which there is very little information in domestic literary publications. If the specimens form witch circles, they may have a slightly different texture and color. On their legs, 3 belts characteristic of the species may be absent.

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