Spider web (Cortinarius urbicus) photo and description

Urban cobweb (Cortinarius urbicus)

Systematics:
  • Division: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Subdivision: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Class: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Subclass: Agaricomycetidae (Agaricomycetes)
  • Order: Agaricales (Agaric or Lamellar)
  • Family: Cortinariaceae (Spiderwebs)
  • Genus: Cortinarius (Spiderweb)
  • Type: Cortinarius urbicus (City webweed)
  • Urban agaric Fries (1821)
  • Suburban agaricus Sprengel (1827)
  • Agaricus arachnostreptus Letellier (1829)
  • Urban Gomphos (Fries) Kuntze (1891)
  • Urban telephone (Frieze) Ricken (1912)
  • Hydrocybe urbica (Fries) M. M. Moser (1953)
  • Urban phlegm (Fries) M. M. Moser (1955)

Spider web (Cortinarius urbicus) photo and description

Current title – Urban curtain (Fries) Fries (1838) [1836–38], Epicrisis systematis mycologici, p. 293

Sometimes two forms of the urban cobweb are conditionally distinguished, which differ in external signs and habitat.

According to the intrageneric classification, the described species Cortinarius urbicus is included in:

  • Subspecies: Telamonia
  • Section: Urban

head 3 to 8 cm in diameter, hemispherical, convex, quickly becomes convex procumbent and almost flat, very fleshy in the center, with or without a broad central tubercle, with a mica surface when young, with a tucked edge, with silvery fibers, slightly hygrophanous , often with dark watery spots or streaks; silver gray, light brown or brown, fading with age, grayish beige when dry.

Gossamer Blanket white, not very dense, often leaving a thin shell on the lower part of the stem at the beginning of the growth of the fungus, subsequently remaining in the form of an annular zone.

Spider web (Cortinarius urbicus) photo and description

Records usually not very dense, attached to the stem, pale grayish, ocher-beige, yellowish, brownish, then rusty brown, with a lighter, whitish edge; may be grey-violet when young.

Leg 3–8 cm high, 0,5–1,5 (2) cm thick, cylindrical or club-shaped (slightly widening downwards), sometimes tuberous at the base, often slightly curved, silky, slightly striated, covered with vanishing with time silvery fibers, whitish, pale grayish, brownish, yellowish-brown with age, sometimes slightly purple above under the cap.

Spider web (Cortinarius urbicus) photo and description

Pulp thick closer to the center, thinning towards the edge of the cap, whitish, pale buff, gray-brown, sometimes purple at the top of the stem.

Smell inexpressive, sweetish, fruity or radish, rare; often there is a “dual” smell in the fruiting body: on the plates – a weak fruit, and in the pulp and at the base of the leg – radish or sparse.

Taste soft, sweet.

Споры elliptical, 7–8,5 x 4,5–5,5 µm, moderately warty, with fine ornamentation.

Spider web (Cortinarius urbicus) photo and description

spore powder: rusty brown.

Exicat (dried specimen): grayish cap, brown to dark brown blades, greyish-white stem.

Grows in moist forests, swampy areas, in grass, under deciduous trees, especially under willow, birch, hazel, linden, poplar, alder, often in groups or clusters; as well as outside the forest – on wastelands in urban settings.

It bears fruit quite late in the season, in August – October.

Inedible.

The following can be mentioned as similar species.

Cortinarius cohabitans – grows only under willows; many authors consider it as a synonym for the dim cobweb (Cortinarius saturninus).

Spider web (Cortinarius urbicus) photo and description

Dull cobweb (Cortinarius saturninus)

Often found together with the urban cobweb, it can also grow in groups in urban environments. It is distinguished by the predominance of yellowish-reddish, brown and sometimes purple tones in the color of the fruiting bodies, a characteristic rim of the remains of the bedspread along the edge of the cap and a felt coating at the base of the stem.

Photo: Andrey.

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