The
cap ranges from in diameter. It has a pale cream to silvery-white colour and may sometimes have a darker yellow to brown coloration towards the central
umbo. Its trademark hood-shaped conical cap expands with age and may flatten out, the surface being marked by minute radiating ridges. The stem is cap-coloured, elongated, thin, hollow and more or less equal along its length with a height up to and diameter of 1–3 mm. It may bear dust and/or small hairs. The
gills are close and tan before darkening to brown. They are adnexed or free and produce a rusty-brown
spore print. The
spores are elliptical and brown to reddish-brown. Very easily missed due to their very small size, the fruit bodies are otherwise quite easy to identify. The flesh has no discernible taste or smell and is extremely fragile to the touch. File:Conocybe_apala_gill_edge.jpg|Gill edge 400x File:Conocybe_apala_spores_1000x.jpg|Spores 1000x
Similar species Similar species include
Conocybe tenera,
Conocybe deliquescens,
Bolbitius lacteus (which has a flatter, slippery cap),
Candolleomyces candolleanus (which is sturdier), and
Conocybe rugosa (which has a ring on the stem). ==Habitat and distribution==