Lactarius occidentalis

Lactarius occidentalis

Lactarius occidentalis is a small fragile species that occurs with alders. The cap is smooth to wrinkled, dry to moist, dark brown to brown with olive colors when fresh, sometimes developing orange-brown tones, non-zoned, and translucent-striate along the edge when fresh. The gills are pinkish cinnamon to pinkish tan, narrow, and close. The stipe is dry and dark brown to brownish orange or grayish brown. The latex is white to whey-like, mild, and may be sparse or absent, especially in older mushrooms. Cut or broken surfaces slowly become reddish brown.
Lactarius occidentalis occurs with alders (which also love growing in abandoned road beds, which this was) - alder cone right at the base of the mushroom Geotagged,Lactarius occidentalis,Summer,United States

Appearance

Lactarius occidentalis is a small fragile species that occurs with alders. The cap is smooth to wrinkled, dry to moist, dark brown to brown with olive colors when fresh, sometimes developing orange-brown tones, non-zoned, and translucent-striate along the edge when fresh. The gills are pinkish cinnamon to pinkish tan, narrow, and close. The stipe is dry and dark brown to brownish orange or grayish brown. The latex is white to whey-like, mild, and may be sparse or absent, especially in older mushrooms. Cut or broken surfaces slowly become reddish brown.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

http://biology.burke.washington.edu/herbarium/imagecollection/taxon.php?Taxon=Lactarius%20occidentalis
Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionBasidiomycota
ClassAgaricomycetes
OrderRussulales
FamilyRussulaceae
GenusLactarius
SpeciesLactarius occidentalis