
Appearance
The caps of young mushrooms are roughly spherical, but soon become convex to flattened in maturity, and reach diameters of 2–9 mm . The cap margin is rolled or curled inward when young, but straightens out as it matures. The cap color is white to cream. The gills are broadly adnate to slightly decurrent, with a color similar to the cap; their spacing is close to subdistant. The whitish stem is equal in width throughout, usually not straight but with curves, and 2–5 cm long by 0.3–1.0 mm thick. The upper region of the stem surface can be covered with what appears to be a white powder, and there are thin hairs near the base. The stems originate from a yellowish-brown sclerotium that is up to 6 mm long. The sclerotium ranges in shape from roughly spherical to almond-shaped to irregular, and its surface is often wrinkled and pitted. The mushroom has no distinctive odor or taste, and its edibility is unknown.In deposit, the spore color is white. The spores are smooth, ellipsoidal to tear-shaped, hyaline , not amyloid, and measure 3.9–5.2 by 2.6–3.3 μm. The basidia are four-spored and hyaline, with dimensions of 16–20 by 4–5 μm. They have clamps at their bases. There are no cystidia on either the edges or faces of the gills. The arrangement of the hyphae in the hymenophoral tissue varies from regular to interwoven. The cap cuticle is a cutis , formed by hyphae with septa, roughly 4–9 μm in diameter. Clamp connections are present in the hyphae. The sclerotium is made of hyphae that have yellow pigment in their walls that appear in cross-section to be pseudoparenchymatous , and measure 5–10 μm in diameter.
Naming
''Collybia cookei'' is most likely to be confused with the two other members of ''Collybia'', both of which are outwardly similar in appearance; distinguishing between the three typically requires excavating the stem base away from the moss or debris in which the stem is embedded. In the field, ''C. tuberosa'' may be distinguished from ''C. cookei'' by its dark brown sclerotia that somewhat resembles an appleseed. Using a microscope provides a more definitive way of distinguishing the two: the hyphae in the sclerotia of ''C. cookei'' are rounded, while those of ''C. tuberosa'' are elongated; this diagnostic character is apparent with both fresh and dried material of the two species. ''C. cirrhata'' does not produce sclerotia.Another mushroom that grows on decomposing fruit bodies is ''Asterophora lycoperdoides'', which is distinct from ''C. cookei'' because of the powdery brown asexual spores produced on the cap surface. Alexander H. Smith has noted a general similarity in appearance between ''C. cookei'' and the North American species ''Clitocybe sclerotoidea'' , which is parasitic to ''Helvella lacunosa''. However, ''C. sclerotoidea'' is larger than ''C. cookei'', with cap diameters up to 3 cm , and has more distantly spaced gills.
Distribution
Like all members of the genus ''Collybia'', ''C. cookei'' grows on the well-rotted, blackened remains of mushrooms, such as species of ''Russula'', ''Meripilus giganteus'', and ''Inonotus hispidus''. Fruit bodies occasionally grow on well-decayed wood or rich humus. The fruit bodies grow scattered, clustered, or in groups. A field study conducted near a Brass mill in Sweden revealed that heavy metal contamination had little effect on the appearance of the mushroom, possibly because its substrate of partially decomposed fruit bodies has a lower metal concentration that the underlying topsoil.''Collybia cookei'' is found in Europe, Asia , and North America. The European distribution extends north to the Arctic Circle and the Lofoten Islands. The species is widely distributed in North America; it was reported from Mexico for the first time in 1998. The fungus is partial to mixed forest dominated by aspen and conifers in montane and subalpine environments. In The Netherlands, it was a component of one of three communities of saprobic fungi associated with roadside verges planted with common oak ; the verges also supported the growth of the mushroom ''Russula ochroleuca'', a host of ''C. cookei''.
Habitat
Like all members of the genus ''Collybia'', ''C. cookei'' grows on the well-rotted, blackened remains of mushrooms, such as species of ''Russula'', ''Meripilus giganteus'', and ''Inonotus hispidus''. Fruit bodies occasionally grow on well-decayed wood or rich humus. The fruit bodies grow scattered, clustered, or in groups. A field study conducted near a Brass mill in Sweden revealed that heavy metal contamination had little effect on the appearance of the mushroom, possibly because its substrate of partially decomposed fruit bodies has a lower metal concentration that the underlying topsoil.''Collybia cookei'' is found in Europe, Asia , and North America. The European distribution extends north to the Arctic Circle and the Lofoten Islands. The species is widely distributed in North America; it was reported from Mexico for the first time in 1998. The fungus is partial to mixed forest dominated by aspen and conifers in montane and subalpine environments. In The Netherlands, it was a component of one of three communities of saprobic fungi associated with roadside verges planted with common oak ; the verges also supported the growth of the mushroom ''Russula ochroleuca'', a host of ''C. cookei''.
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