
Appearance
The cap is shallowly convex to convex or irregularly convex, and with or without a shallow umbo, measuring up to 16 mm in diameter and up to 5 mm high. The cap margin is curved downward, sometimes slightly flared, and sometimes has translucent radial striations marking the positions of the gills underneath. The white flesh—thickest at the center of the cap—tapers gradually to the margin. The gills are broadly adnate to decurrent . The gill edges are either smooth and even, or may have minute teeth. The gills are well-spaced, with 16 to 24 gills extending fully from the cap margin to the stipe, and two or three tiers of interspersed lamellulae . The smooth, cylindrical stipe is up to 27 mm long, and up to 2.5 mm in diameter at the base, narrowing towards the top. It is hollow, silky to shiny, and mucilaginous—usually with thick slime at the base. Sometimes, there are short white hairs at the bottom of the stipe, although their presence is variable. The mushroom has no distinctive odor.Spores are roughly ellipsoidal in shape with a Q ratio of 1.6, and dimensions of 9.4–15.4 by 6.2–9.0 μm. They have a small, oblique apiculus, lack oil droplets, and are smooth with thin walls, and hyaline . The spores are acyanophilous and strongly amyloid, meaning they stain with Methyl blue and Melzer's reagent, respectively. The basidia are four-spored and club-shaped with long, robust sterigmata up to 6.0 μm long; they have clamp connections at their bases, and measure 35.3–49.6 by 10.3–14.4 μm. ''Roridomyces austrororidus'' has two types of cheilocystidia . One is rare, broadly club-shaped, and tapers to a narrow stem; it measures 24.1–39.5 by 6.8–12.7 μm. The other cheilocystidia are moderately dense to abundant, and form a sterile gill edge. They are cylindrical, measuring 27.5–70.4 by 5.4–10.4 μm, and often have a swollen tip that splits into two, rarely three branches.

Naming
The species was first described as ''Mycena austrororida'' by mycologist Rolf Singer in 1962, based on specimens he collected from Masatierra, in the Juan Fernandez Islands, Chile. Karl-Heinz Rexer transferred it to the newly circumscribed genus ''Roridomyces'' in his 1994 doctoral thesis. The name ''Mycena veronicae'', published by New Zealand mycologist Greta Stevenson in 1964, is a synonym of ''M. austrororida''.The mushroom is commonly known as the "austro dripping bonnet". The specific epithet combines the Latin words ''austro'' and ''roridus'' .The African species ''Roridomyces mauritianus'' is similar in appearance to ''R. austrororidus'', but can be distinguished by the brownish cap, and microscopically by its smaller spores , and its shorter , club-shaped basidia.
Distribution
Like all members of its genus, ''Roridomyces austrororidus'' grows as a saprophyte on rotting wood. In Australia, the fungus fruits in clusters or groups on rainforest trees, decayed logs, fallen ''Eucalyptus'' branches, ''Bedfordia salicina'' logs and branches, and ''Nothofagus cunninghamii'' logs. Fruiting usually occurs after rainy periods from April to June, although the mushroom has also been collected in August. New Zealand collections have been reported to grow on ''Pinus'', ''Leptospermum'', and ''Ripogonum''. A study of fungal succession in a wet eucalypt forest in Tasmania demonstrated that ''R. austrororidus'' prefers mature forests , and fruits on small diameter wood—typically twigs with a width less than 15 mm .''Roridomyces austrororidus'' occurs in Argentina, Chile, New Zealand, and Australia. Its Australian distribution includes Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and Western Australia. Australian mycologist Tony Young suggests that the geographical distribution of the fungus indicates that its ancestor may have originated from the ancient continent Gondwana.
Habitat
Like all members of its genus, ''Roridomyces austrororidus'' grows as a saprophyte on rotting wood. In Australia, the fungus fruits in clusters or groups on rainforest trees, decayed logs, fallen ''Eucalyptus'' branches, ''Bedfordia salicina'' logs and branches, and ''Nothofagus cunninghamii'' logs. Fruiting usually occurs after rainy periods from April to June, although the mushroom has also been collected in August. New Zealand collections have been reported to grow on ''Pinus'', ''Leptospermum'', and ''Ripogonum''. A study of fungal succession in a wet eucalypt forest in Tasmania demonstrated that ''R. austrororidus'' prefers mature forests , and fruits on small diameter wood—typically twigs with a width less than 15 mm .''Roridomyces austrororidus'' occurs in Argentina, Chile, New Zealand, and Australia. Its Australian distribution includes Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania and Western Australia. Australian mycologist Tony Young suggests that the geographical distribution of the fungus indicates that its ancestor may have originated from the ancient continent Gondwana.
References:
Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.