Spectacular Rustgill / Summer / Autumn / Winter / Inedible
Scientific Name
Gymnopilus Junonius
Common Names
Spectacular Rustgill, Laughing Gym, Laughing Jim.
Family
Strophariaceae
Habitat
They are saprotrophic and are most often found on the stumps of deciduous trees, they do occasionally appear on coniferous stumps.
Description
A large and fairly common mushroom with quite a long season.
Identifying Features:
Cap:
Convex when young with an in rolled margin they flatten out with age but retain a slight central umbo. They are orange/yellow to brown in colour. The caps are covered with very fine orange coloured radial fibres.
Stem:
Their stems are pretty stout and robust tending to get more bulbous towards the base. They are roughly the same colour as the caps. When the fruit bodies are young they have a cortina protecting the gills, as this breaks away it leaves a faint ring on the stem which will darken as it catches some of the spores.
Gills:
The gills are crowded and adnate, yellowish when young, the rust coloured spores darken the gills as they age.
Smell:
Slightly fruity.
Spores:
Rusty, orange to brown.
Known hazards
Several mycologists have found that specimens from various parts of the world contain toxins, including the hallucinogens psilocybin and psilobin. The common name Laughing Jim (or Gym) has been given to this mushroom because of its hallucinogenic properties.
Potential lookalikes
The Common Rustgill (Gymnopilus Penetrans) can look similar but this lacks the ring on the stem.
The Golden Bootleg (Phaeolepiota Aurea) can also look similar but this is a very rare mushroom and it has a yellowish spore print.
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