Cantharellus subalbidus
Smith & Morse
Mycologia 39: 510. 1947.
Common Name: White Chanterelle
Pileus
Cap 5-10 cm broad, convex, margin incurved, expanding to nearly
plane or depressed at the disc with an uplifted, wavy to irregular
margin; surface smooth to appressed squamulose, dry, whitish to
cream, bruising yellowish-brown to tawny-brown; flesh thick,
whitish, firm, becoming ochraceous to tawny where exposed. Odor
and taste mild.
Lamellae
Gills consisting of blunt, anastomosing ridges, well forked near the
margin, strongly decurrent, whitish to cream, staining like the pileus
when injured.
Stipe
Stipe 2-5 cm long, 2-3 cm thick, fleshy, usually centrally attached,
tapering toward the base; surface dry, smooth to somewhat
roughened, concolorous with the cap, bruising dull yellow-brown to
tawny-brown, especially near the base.
Spores
Spores 7.5-9.0 x 5-6 µm, elliptical, smooth, nonamyloid; spores
white in deposit.
Habitat
Scattered to gregarious in duff under mixed hardwood/conifer woods;
found with but not limited to pines (Pinus sp.), Douglas Fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), and Madrone (Arbutus menziesii); fruiting from late fall to
mid-winter.
Edibility
Edible and choice.
Comments
Cantharellus subalbidus closely resembles its more common cousin,
C. cibarius, but can be distinguished by a paler, white to cream-colored cap, lack of a fruity/apricot odor and spores that are
slightly smaller and paler, i.e. white vs. cream yellow. Two other
mushrooms that could be mistaken for Cantharellus subalbidus
include Tricholoma magnivelare and Leucopaxillus albissimus.
Tricholoma magnivelare, a choice edible in its own right, also tends to bruise yellow to tawny-brown, but the gills are not decurrent, and it
has a well developed veil and a strong spicy odor; Leucopaxillus
albissimus is a large, white mushroom often associated with redwood
or eucalyptus. It has subdecurrent "true" gills, not easily confused
with the blunt gill-like ridges of the white chanterelle. Additionally,
Leucopaxillus albissimus differs in fruiting from a bed of dense,
white mycelium.
Other Descriptions and Photos
- Herb Saylor: Cantharellus subalbidus (CP)
- Herb Saylor: Cantharellus subalbidus (CP)
- Boleslaw Kuznik -- Hunting for Mushrooms: Cantharellus subalbidus (CP)
- Arora (1986): p. 662 (D), plate 179 (CP)
- Arora (1991): p. 5 (D & CP)
- Fischer & Bessette: p. 25 (CP)
- Lincoff: p. 392 (D), plate 432
- McKenny et al.: p. 27 (D), p. 28 (CP)
- Phillips: p. 214 (D & CP)
- Smith (1975): sp. 35 (D & CP)
- Thiers (1985a): p. 8 (D)
(D=Description; I=Illustration; P=Photo; CP=Color Photo)
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