Uwina ʻoliva ʻulaʻula (Cortinarius rufoolivaceus)

Systematics:
  • Māhele: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Māhele: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Papa: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Papa haʻahaʻa: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Kauoha: Agaricales (Agaric a i ʻole Lamellar)
  • ʻOhana: Cortinariaceae (Spiderwebs)
  • ʻAno: Cortinarius (Spiderweb)
  • Type: Cortinarius rufoolivaceus
  • Honi ka punawelewele;
  • Uwina kolo ʻala;
  • Cortinarius rufous-olive;
  • Myxacium rufoolivaceum;
  • ʻO Phlegmatium rufoolivaceous.

ʻO ke kiʻi a me ka wehewehe ʻana

He ʻano ʻano haʻupuʻu no ka ʻohana Punawelewele ʻulaʻula (Cortinarius rufoolivaceus).

Ka wehewehe waho

ʻO ka hiʻohiʻona o ka ʻupena ʻoliva ʻulaʻula he nani a nani hoʻi. ʻO ka pāpale me ke anawaena o 6 a 12 cm i ka wā mua, i nā ʻōpala ʻōpio, he ʻano spherical a me ka ʻili mucous. Ma hope iki, wehe ʻia, e moe ana a loaʻa kahi kala poni momona ma ka ʻaoʻao. ʻO ka waena o ka pāpale i loko o nā halo makua e lilo i lilac-ʻulaʻula a ʻulaʻula paha. Hōʻike ʻia ka hymenophore e kahi ʻano lamellar. ʻO kona mau ʻāpana he mau papa i loaʻa i ka waihoʻoluʻu ʻoliva-melemele i ka wā mua, a i ka wā e oʻo ai ka haʻiki, lilo lākou i ʻoliva ʻoliva. Loaʻa iā lākou nā spores i hōʻike ʻia e kahi ʻano almond, kahi ʻulaʻula melemele māmā a me kahi ʻili warty. ʻO kā lākou mau ana he 12-14 * 7-8 microns.

ʻO ka ʻaoʻao kiʻekiʻe o ka wāwae mushroom he ʻulaʻula ʻulaʻula. ʻO ka mānoanoa o ka wāwae o ka cobweb ʻoliva ʻulaʻula he 1.5-3 cm, a ʻo ka lōʻihi mai 5 a 7 cm. Ma ke kumu, hoʻonui ka wāwae o ka haʻiki, e loaʻa i kahi hoʻokumu tuberous.

He ʻawaʻawa loa ka pulp mushroom i ka ʻono, ʻike ʻia e kahi ʻulaʻula liʻiliʻi a i ʻole ʻoliva hue.

Kau a me kahi noho

Despite its widespread rarity, the red-olive cobweb is still widespread in non-moral European areas. Prefers to live in mixed and deciduous forests. Able to form mycorrhiza with deciduous trees, found in nature only in large groups. It mainly grows under hornbeams, beeches and oaks. On the territory of the Federation, the red-olive cobweb can be seen in the Belgorod region, Tatarstan, the Krasnodar Territory, and the Penza region. The fruiting period falls on the second half of summer and the first half of autumn. The red-olive cobweb feels good on calcareous soils, in regions with a moderately warm climate.

ʻAi ʻai

No nā halo ʻai ʻo Red-olive cobweb (Cortinarius rufoolivaceus), akā ʻaʻole i aʻo iki ʻia kona mau meaʻai.

ʻO nā ʻano halo i wehewehe ʻia he mea liʻiliʻi loa ia ma ke ʻano, no laila, ma kekahi mau ʻāina ʻEulopa, ua helu ʻia ʻo ia ma ka Red Book ma ke ʻano he ʻano pōʻino.

ʻO nā ʻano like a me nā ʻokoʻa mai lākou

He ʻano like loa ka ʻano o nā ʻupena ʻoliva ʻulaʻula me ka pūnāwai keleawe-melemele e hiki ke ʻai ʻia, nona ka inoa Latin Cortinarius orichalceus. ʻOiaʻiʻo, ma ka hope, he ʻulaʻula ʻulaʻula ka pāpale, ʻo ka ʻiʻo ma ke kumu he ʻōmaʻomaʻo, a ʻike ʻia nā papa e kahi kala melemele-sulfur.

Waiho i ka Reply