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Funeral Bell
Funeral Bell
The aptly named Funeral Bell contains the same toxins as the Deathcap so it is a good mushroom to get to know and avoid. It has quite a few similar looking mushrooms as it is an LBM, little brown mushroom, but apart from the velvet shank, which is fairly easy to identify, there are none others of interest to the forager.
Mushroom Type | |
Common Names | Funeral Bell (EN), Cloch Godreog (CY), Hełmówka Jadowita (PL), Fenyves Sisakgomba (HU) |
Scientific Name | Galerina marginata |
Season Start | Aug |
Season End | Nov |
Average Mushroom height (CM) | 2-7 |
Average Cap width (CM) | 2-6 |
Cap
2-6 cm. Varying in colour from pale yellow/brown to orange depending on how wet the cap is and how old, usually with a lighter edge compared to the centre.
Gills
Pale tan to red/brown. Fairly crowded and broadly attached to the stem to slightly running down it (adnate to slightly decurrent).
Stem
2-7 cm long, o.3-0.8 cm diameter. Pale silvery/tan to dark brown depending on age and weather conditions. The stem is fibrilose, particularly below the ring.
Habitat
Mainly on conifer stumps but can be found on deciduous tree stumps, woodchips and in open grassland.
Possible Confusion
Can look like the Velvet Shank, pictured, but the Velvet Shank (Flammulina velutipes) has a black, velvety stem with no skirt although the stem is light tan on younger mushrooms.
Also looks very like the Sheathed Woodtuft (Kuehneromyces mutabilis), which is an edible mushroom but looks too much like the Funeral Bell to make it a safe mushroom for consumption.
Spore Print
Snuff brown. Ellipsoid.
Frequency
Fairly common.
Other Facts
This mushroom is very poisonous and contains the same toxins as the Deathcap (Amanita phalloides).
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