Wax Caps
Hygrocybe is a genus of agarics (gilled fungi) in the family Hygrophoraceae. Called waxcaps in English (sometimes waxy caps in North America), basidiocarps (fruit bodies) are often brightly coloured and have waxy to slimy caps, white spores, and smooth, ringless stems. In Europe they are characteristic of old, unimproved grasslands (termed waxcap grasslands) which are a declining habitat, making many Hygrocybe species of conservation concern. Elsewhere they are more typically found in woodlands. Most are ground-dwelling and all are believed to be moss associates.
Cuphophyllus pratensis (Meadow Waxcap) Broxbourne Wood, UK 204 Cuphophyllus virgineus (Snowy waxcap) Hopkinton, NH Hygrocybe (Waxcap) Bartlett, NH 017 Hygrocybe coccinea (Scarlet Waxcap) Bartlett, NH 040 Hygrocybe conica (Blackening Waxcap, Witches Hat) Kinlochleven, Scotland 285 Hygrocybe conica (Blackening Waxcap, Witches Hat) Kinlochleven, Scotland 286 Hygrocybe conica (Witch's hat) Hopkinton, NH Hygrocybe conica (Witches Hat) Hopkinton, NH Hygrocybe flavescens Hopkinton, NH1 Hygrocybe marginata (Orange Gilled Waxcap) Hopkinton, NH Hygrocybe miniata (Fading Scalet waxcap) Hopkinton, NH Hygrocybe miniata (Vermillon waxcap) Hopkinton, NH Hygrocybe punicea (crimson waxcap) Fox Forest, Hillsboro, NH Hygrocybe squamulosa Strafford, NH Hygrocybe squamulosa Strafford,NH.JPG Laccaria laccata (Waxy laccaria) Hopkinton, NH