Hohenbuehelia

The fruitbody consists of a cap, with gills on the underside. Generally there is no stem, though a very rudimentary one may be present in some species.  The caps range from 1 to 10 centimetres in longest dimension and may be fan-shaped, spoon-shaped, kidney-shaped or semi-circular. The caps have a gelatinous layer in the upper part of the cap, giving the cap a jelly-like texture (except in dry conditions). The cap may be smooth or somewhat velvety/hairy and dry or viscid. The caps may be white or (more often) grey, brown or black. The gills are commonly white/creamy to greyish.

Spore print: white.

The genus is cosmopolitan, with the fruitbodies growing from wood (e.g. dead wood, the bark of live trees, woodchip mulch).

Look-alikes

A definite identification of the genus relies on microscopic features. Suppose you have a cap with a jelly-like texture. If it is viscid or if it measures more than say 2 centimetres then Hohenbuehelia is a good guess. Not guaranteed to be correct, but with the odds in its favour.

In our region Resupinatus is probably genus most like Hohenbuehelia, the fruitbodies also containing a gelatinous layer and giving a white spore print. The caps may grow to 2 centimetres and are not viscid. Which means the chance of confusion is greatest if you gave small dry caps.

The caps of Conchomyces bursiformis have a rubbery texture, grow to several centimetres in diameter, are not viscid and give a white spore print. The species was once placed in Hohenbuehelia.

Pleurotus, Lentinellus, Campanella, Crepidotus and Tapinella are other ‘cap-no-stem’ genera. All lack a gelatinous layer. The first three are white spored and species of Lentinellus have gills with raggedy edges and in Campanella you find a few radial gills with varying numbers of cross-connections between them. Crepidotus is a common genus, but with a brown spore print. The gills of Tapinella (yellowish brown spore print) are crimped or wrinkled and are often forked or with cross-connections.

Hohenbuehelia is listed in the following regions:

Canberra & Southern Tablelands

Page 1 of 1 - image sightings only

Species information

  • Hohenbuehelia Scientific name
  • Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Unknown
  • Unknown
  • Up to 1098.62m Recorded at altitude
  • Machine learning

Follow Hohenbuehelia

Receive alerts of new sightings

Subscribe

Location information

2,153,980 sightings of 19,952 species in 6,496 locations from 11,442 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.