Melodyne Klyuch Aktivaciya
• Agaricus chlorophos Berk. & M.A.Curtis (1860) • Agaricus cyanophos Berk. Curtis (1860) Mycena chlorophos is a species of in the family. First described in 1860, the fungus is found in Asia, including,,,, and, in,. (mushrooms) have pale brownish-grey sticky up to 30 mm (1.2 in) in diameter atop 6–30 mm (0.2–1.2 in) long and up to a millimeter thick.
The mushrooms are and emit a pale green light. Fruiting occurs in forests on fallen woody debris such as dead twigs, branches, and logs. The fungus can be made to grow and fruit in laboratory conditions, and the growth conditions affecting bioluminescence have been investigated. Contents • • • • • • • • Taxonomy [ ] The species was first scientifically by and in 1860 as Agaricus chlorophos. The original specimens were collected from the by American botanist in October 1854 as part of the of 1853–56. Transferred the species to the genus in an 1887 publication.
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And colleagues redescribed the species and set a specimen in 2010. In 1860 Berkeley and Curtis described the species Agaricus cyanophos from material also collected from the Bonin Islands. This material was found near the location that the original specimens of M. chlorophos were found, but a couple of weeks later. Japanese mycologists and studied these collections in the late 1930s, and concluded that Agaricus cyanophos was the same species as M. chlorophos, despite differences in cap shape, gill attachment, and the color of emitted light. Desjardin and colleagues agreed with this determination after examining the type material of both taxa.
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M. chlorophos is in the Exornatae of the genus Mycena. Other luminescent species in this section are.
Some authors have considered to be synonymous with M. chlorophos due to their morphological similarity, but analysis has shown that they are distinct species. In Japan, the mushroom is known as yakoh-take, or 'night-light mushroom'. In the it is called 'Green Pepe'. Description [ ] Mycena chlorophos. Gills on is conical or flat is free or adnexed is bare is white ecology is edibility: The is initially convex before flattening out (sometimes forming a central depression), and measures up to 30 mm (1.2 in) in diameter. The cap has radial grooves extending to nearly the center, and sometimes develops cracks in the margin, which has small rounded teeth.
Its color is pale brownish gray that fades after expansion, and it is somewhat sticky. The white is 6–30 mm (0.24–1.18 in) long by 0.3–1 mm thick, hollow, and translucent. It has tiny hairs on the surface. The base of the stem is disc-shaped or somewhat bulbous, measuring 1–2.5 mm wide. The thin are free from attachment to the stem, or are adnexed (narrowly attached) to a slight collar encircling the stem. Initially white then grayish in color, they are somewhat crowded, with 17–32 full-length gills and 1 to 3 tiers of lamellulae (shorter gills that do not extend fully from the cap margin to the stem).
The gills are 0.3–1 mm wide with edges. The is very thin, and has a strong odor of. Both the caps and the gills are bioluminescent, while the and stems have little to no luminescence. The spores are white, smooth, roughly elliptical, and have dimensions of 7–8.5 by 5–6.
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The (spore-bearing cells) are 17–23 by 7.5–10 μm, and four-spored with around 3 μm long. The are 5–8 μm wide, shorter than the basidia, more abundant and form a somewhat gelatinous layer. The cheilocystidia ( on the cap edge) are 60 by 7–21 μm,, conical or ventricose (inflated). The tips of the cheilocystidia are drawn out to a point, or have a short appendage measuring 15 by 2–3 μm, which is sometimes branched, and is thin or slightly thick-walled. There are no cystidia on the gill face (pleurocystidia). Pileocystidia (cystidia on the surface of the cap) are club-shaped, measuring 25–60 by 13–25 μm.