The following relationships have been collated from the published literature (see 'References').
Stage | Summary | Taxon | Vernacular | Classification | References | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
fruitbody | fruitbody is associated with | POACEAE | grasses, couch | Poales | Checklist of the British and Irish Basidiomycota, Legon, N.W. & Henrici, A. with Roberts, P.J., Spooner, B.M. & Watling, R., 2005 |
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fruitbody | fruitbody is associated with | BRYOPSIDA | mosses | Checklist of the British and Irish Basidiomycota, Legon, N.W. & Henrici, A. with Roberts, P.J., Spooner, B.M. & Watling, R., 2005 |
Entoloma sericellum (Cream Pinkgill) may also be included in 'feeds on' relations listed under the following higher taxa:
Author & Year | Title | Source |
---|---|---|
Legon, N.W. & Henrici, A. with Roberts, P.J., Spooner, B.M. & Watling, R., 2005 | Checklist of the British and Irish Basidiomycota | 517pp, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew |
Species | Entoloma sericellum (Cream Pinkgill) |
Subgenus | Entoloma (Alboleptonia) (a group of toadstools) |
Genus | Entoloma (pinkgills) |
Family | ENTOLOMATACEAE (pinkgills) |
Order | AGARICALES (mushrooms and toadstools) |
Class | AGARICOMYCETES (a class of fungi) |
Subphylum | AGARICOMYCOTINA |
Phylum | BASIDIOMYCOTA (spore droppers) |
Kingdom | FUNGI (true fungi) |
Domain | Eukaryota (eukaryotes) |
Life | BIOTA (living things) |
NBN (data.nbn.org.uk) has a distribution map for Entoloma sericellum (Cream Pinkgill) |
Author | Year | Title | Source | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Largent, D.L. & Watling, R. | 1986 | Mycologia Vol 78 (1): 132-133. |
Entoloma sericellum (Cream Pinkgill) may also be included in identification literature listed under the following higher taxa:
Literature listed under the following higher taxa may be relevant to Entoloma sericellum (Cream Pinkgill):
A small white or slightly yellowish toadstool which is rather variable in size and shape. It is is found in grassland, among mosses in poorly manured, semi-natural habitats such as dune meadows and montane and subalpine grasslands and also in deciduous woodland among humus or on bare ground on various soil types. It is widespread and relatively common.
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