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synonyms: Spotted Cort |
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location: North America |
edibility: Poisonous/Suspect |
fungus colour: Violet or purple |
normal size: Less than 5cm |
cap type: Convex to shield shaped |
stem type: Bulbous base of stem |
flesh: Mushroom slimy or sticky |
spore colour: Rusty brown |
habitat: Grows in woods, Grows on the ground |
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Cortinarius iodes Berk. & Curt. subgenus Myxacium Spotted Cort. Cap 2-5cm across, convex expanding to bell-shaped; deep purple-violet to slightly yellowish on disc, often spotted irregularly with yellowish spots; smooth, very viscid in wet weather. Gills adnate, somewhat broad; violet then gray-cinnamon. Stem 40-75 x 5-15mm, often irregular and swollen at base; colored as cap; smooth, viscid below like cap, with faint ring zone at apex from cobwebby veil. Flesh soft; violet becoming pallid. Odor pleasant. Taste (of cuticle) mild. Spores ellipsoid, minutely roughened, 7-10 x 5-7µ., quotient 1.4. Deposit rust-brown. Edibility like all Cortinarius species- not recommended. Habitat common and abundant through eastern North America, rare in the Pacific Northwest. Season August-September. Comment The very similar Cortinarius iodeoides Kauffman differs in its bitter cap surface and longer, narrower spores. |
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tracy hobbs (United States) - 16 August 2013

August 16, 2013 In an oak and Hemlock forest in upstate PA.
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Jake Correia (United States) - 13 August 2012

West Newfield, York Co, ME 8/12/12
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Bri Christie (United States) - 10 September 2011

Cortinarius iodes in Southern NH.
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Bri Christie (United States) - 10 September 2011

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