What is a barrier wax cap?
Mauve cleavable wax cap is a sponge originally from Australia and New Zealand. As you can imagine from the name, this fungus is known for its purple shade and a distinctly divided cap, which also has a wax texture. Thanks to its brilliant color, the fungus is a popular object for photographers in the areas where it grows, and it is easy to identify it, so it is a good starting fungus for people who are just beginning to learn to identify mushrooms. Europeans are attributed to “discovery”. Because the privilege of naming in general goes to a person who discovers the organism, European biologist Karola Kalchbrenner, he named this fungus after the description at the end of the 18th century.
formally known as wet Lewelliniae , this fungus is in the family of wax caps. Like the other members of this family, they also have a texture that is slightly waxed to the touch, and as the name of the family suggests, the skin is very humid, which can add to the wax feeling. Wax caps also often leave wax remnants on the skin that canfeel strange or unpleasant, depending on the feelings of a person about wax.
Several functions out of color are distinguished by a split wax closure. This fungus is exposed, with the gills are more free than connected and the distinctive division in the cap develop along the line of gills below them. The cap is in the shape more like an umbrella and a stem, also known as a stipe, is smooth. Printing spores is white and the fungus does not seem to be edible.
This fungus prefers a humid environment and can be found in mild and tropical areas of New Zealand and Australia. The more healing in areas with thick layers of leaf molds and mushrooms often grow in small clusters. They will also grow in sandy soils.