Category
page 1Pluteaceae

straw mushroom
species of fungus

Volvariella bombycina
species of edible mushroom in the family Pluteaceae

Volvopluteus gloiocephalus
species of Agaricomycetes
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Volvariella
Volvariella is a genus of fungi with deep salmon-pink gills and spore prints.
Pluteaceae
The Pluteaceae are a family of small to medium-sized mushrooms which have free gill attachment and pink spores. Members of Pluteaceae can be mistaken for members of Entolomataceae, but can be distinguished by the angled spores and attached gills of the Entolomataceae. The four genera in the Pluteaceae comprise the widely distributed Volvariella and Pluteus, the rare Chamaeota, and Volvopluteus, which was newly described in 2011 as a result of molecular analysis. The Dictionary of the Fungi (10th edition, 2008) estimates there are 364 species in the family.

Volvariella surrecta
species of fungus

Volvopluteus
Volvopluteus is a genus of small to medium-sized or big saprotrophic mushrooms growing worldwide. The genus has been segregated from Volvariella with which it shares some morphological characteristics such as the presence of a volva and a pink to pink-brown spore print. Phylogenetic analyses of DNA data have shown that Volvopluteus is closely related to Pluteus and both genera currently are classified in the family Pluteaceae, while Volvariella is not closely related to either genus and its position in the Agaricales is still uncertain.
Volvariella media
species of fungus
Pluteus pellitus
species of fungus
Volvariella pusilla
species of fungus
Chamaeota
Chamaeota is a genus in the Pluteaceae family of small- to medium-sized mushrooms. They have a central stipe, free gills, smooth pink spores, and a partial veil that usually forms an annulus (ring) on the stipe. Chamaeota can be distinguished from Volvariella by its lack of a volva and from Entolomataceae by its free gills and smooth spores.
Volvopluteus michiganensis
species of fungus
Volvopluteus earlei
species of fungus
Volvopluteus asiaticus
species of fungus