Inocybe praetervisa — Overlooked fibrecap, overlooked fiberhead

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Overlooked fibrecap2, photograph by Adolf Ceska.

Overlooked fibrecap

Overlooked fibrecap13 photograph by Adolf Ceska.

Overlooked fibrecap

Overlooked fibrecap12 showing gills and expanded bulb at base of stem, photograph by Adolf Ceska.

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Overlooked fibrecap11, A. Habit; B. Cystidia; C. Basidiospores Inocybe praetervisa, sketches by Oluna Ceska.


Odour: Unknown.
Cap: 3–6 cm in diameter, conical when young, becoming flatter with age, usually with a knob (an umbo) in the middle. Colour orange-brown or yellowish-brown, sometimes paler around the margins. The surface is fibrillose, with radial cracks.
Gills: Close together, narrow and narrowly adnate; initially cream, becoming brownish as spores mature. Seen with a hand lens, gill edges are often paler than the sporulating gill surfaces.
Stems: 4–7 cm long x 0.4–1.0 cm wide, initially white, upper half often with a slight fuzz (pruinose, visible with hand lens), sometime becoming brown with drying. The base of the stipe is often marginate, which means that it flares out abruptly into a wider bulb at its base (see the photo above).
Ring: None obvious.
Cup: None.
Spores: 8–13 (14) x 6–8.5 µm, brown. Spores have 8–11 knobs; if you squint, their profiles look like animal crackers or gummy bears! See the sketch above.
Cystidia: Elongate, thick-walled cells and shaped somewhat like bottles with a cap of minute crystals. They are located on the gills. See the sketch above.
Habitat: On forest floor under Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), grand fir (Abies grandis), and other conifers on Vancouver Island, British Columbia and probably elsewhere in the Pacific northwest. The species reportedly grows in mixed boreal forests in Europe, but due to difficulties with identification, the host range is poorly known3. Ectomycorrhizal.
Confirmed geographical distribution: BC, Italy, Spain5. Likely elsewhere in Europe and North America but this is difficult to confirm because records of occurrence of this species are so frequently based on misidentified specimens. Barcode DNA sequences are needed to verify specimen identity.

This species is recognizable as a fibrecap by its fibrous, conical caps. With age, cap margins often develop radial slits or tears. The mushroom grows from soil and as is typical of fibrecap species, it is relatively small. More difficult is distinguishing the overlooked fibrecap from the many other Inocybe species with similar colours and sizes. In the Pacific northwest and BC, the species has regularly been mistaken for I. mixtilis, I. xanthomelas, or I. calida4, all of which are European species that may be absent from North America.

The overlooked fibrecap is perhaps one of the more common fibrecaps in BC coastal Douglas fir forests in summer. The flat-topped bulb at the base of its stem helps identify it. The shape and size of its microscopic cystidia and its relatively large, knobby basidiospores further rule out many alternative identifications. However, BC and the Pacific northwest are rich in as-yet undescribed Inocybe species.
No fibrecap should be eaten. Due to fibrecaps' small size and unpleasant odours, dogs have been more likely than humans to consume them. Cases of dogs poisoned by Inocybe species have been reported almost every year6. In the poisoning cases, fibrecaps have usually been identified to genus, not to species, so it is difficult to be sure which ones are most frequently responsible for illness.

Toxins7: Inocybe praetervisa probably contains muscarine8. Muscarine is a cholinergic toxin. It acts by mimicking the neurotransmitter acetylcholine and interfering with normal transmission of nerve impulses to smooth muscles. The presence of knobby spores (see sketch) in vomit would be good evidence that a fibrecap in this general group was eaten and that muscarine was causing the poisoning symptoms. However, many muscarine-containing fibrecaps have smooth spores so the absence of knobs on spores does not rule out poisoning by a fibrecap.

Symptoms9: Time of onset usually between 15 min and 2 hours, occasionally 5 hours or longer, usually ending in 24 hours. 'SLUDGE' symptoms result, Salivation, Lacrimation (excess tear formation); Urination; Diarrhoea; Gastrointestinal upset; Emesis (vomiting)10.

Treatment11: Contact your regional Poison Control Centre if you or someone you know is ill after eating fibrecaps. Poison centres provide free, expert medical advice 24 hours a day, seven days a week. If possible, save the mushrooms or some of the leftover food containing the mushrooms to help confirm identification.

Poison Control:
British Columbia: 604-682-5050 or 1-800-567-8911.
United States (WA, OR, ID): 1-800-222-1222.

1
UBC. University of British Columbia Herbarium Database, accessed February 1, 2018.

2
Specimen Inocybe praetervisa UBC F19660; MO #74998, GenBank #HQ604400.

3
Esteve-Raventós, F., Moreno, G., Alvarado, P. & Olariaga, I. Unraveling the Inocybe praetervisa group through type studies and ITS data: Inocybe praetervisoides sp. nov. from the Mediterranean region. Mycologia 108, 123-134, doi:10.3852/15-053 (2016).

4
Jacobsson, S. Inocybe (Fr.) Fr. Pp. 868-906 in Funga Nordica, Agaricoid, Boletoid and Cyphelloid Genera (eds Knudsen, H. & Vesteroholt, J.) Nordsvamp, Copenhagen (2008).

5
Abarenkov, K. et al. PlutoF-a Web based workbench for ecological and taxonomic research, with an online implementation for fungal ITS sequences. Evol. Bioinf. 6, 189-196, doi:10.4137/ebo.s6271 (2010).

6
Beug, M. W., Shaw, M. & Cochran, K. W. Thirty-plus years of mushroom poisoning: Summary of the approximately 2,000 reports in the NAMA case registry. McIlvainea 16, 47-68 (2006).

7
Berger, K. J. & Guss, D. A. Mycotoxins revisited: Part II. J. Emerg. Med. 28, 175-183, doi:10.1016/j.jemermed.2004.08.019 (2005).

8
Kosentka, P. et al. Evolution of the toxins muscarine and psilocybin in a family of mushroom-forming fungi. Plos One 8, 9, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0064646 (2013).

9
Lurie, Y. et al. Mushroom poisoning from species of genus Inocybe (fiber head mushroom): a case series with exact species identification. Clin. Toxicol. 47, 562-565, doi:10.1080/15563650903008448 (2009).

10
USA Centers for Disease Control. Cholinesterase inhibitors: including insecticides and chemical warfare nerve agents. Part 4: The cholinergic toxidrome. Section 3: Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, <https://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/csem/csem.asp?csem=11&po=9> accessed June 16 2017, published by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, Atlanta, Georgia (2007).

11
Leikin, J. B. & Paloucek, F. P. Poisoning and Toxicology Handbook, 4th ed., CRC Press, Boca Raton, Florida (2008).

12
Specimen Inocybe praetervisa UBC F19522, GenBank #HQ604398.

13
Specimen Inocybe praetervisa UBC F19441, GenBank #HQ604396.