Marasmius capillaris

Marasmius capillaris

''Marasmius capillaris'' is a species of agaric fungus in the family Marasmiaceae. A saprobic fungus, it produces fruit bodies that grows in groups on decaying oak leaves in North America.
Marasmius capillaris Cap was about 6-7 mm diameter, brownish gray, pleated, and with a central depression. White, distant gills. The stipe was very long - about 6 cm. It was less than a mm thick. 

Habitat: Growing on an oak leaf in a mixed forest. Geotagged,Marasmius capillaris,Summer,United States,fungus,marasmius,mushroom

Appearance

The caps on the mushrooms are convex and then centrally depressed with radial furrows, measuring 2–15 mm in diameter. The wiry, shiny stems are thin and up to 60 mm long. Its spore print is white, and the spores are smooth and pip-shaped, measuring 7–11 by 3–5 μm. The mushrooms somewhat resemble ''Marasmius rotula'', but are smaller and darker in color.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomFungi
DivisionBasidiomycota
ClassAgaricomycetes
OrderAgaricales
FamilyMarasmiaceae
GenusMarasmius
SpeciesM. capillaris