Depending on the age of the mushroom, the
cap can range in shape from conic to convex to bell-shaped to somewhat flattened in age; it reaches in diameter. It is sometimes shallowly
umbilicate (with a small depression like a navel), radially grooved almost to the center, and somewhat
hygrophanous (changing color as it loses or absorbs water). The cap surface is dry, and
pruinose (covered with what appears to be a fine white powder), but this soon sloughs off, leaving the surface smooth. Initially, the cap color is dark violet, but it later fades to grayish-violet around the edges. The whitish
flesh is up to 0.5 mm thick, and lacks any distinctive taste or odor. The slender
stem is long by thick, cylindrical, centrally attached to the stem, and hollow. Its surface is dry, pruinose over the entire length, and grayish-violet to dark violet in color. The base is covered with a white mycelial
tomentum (a hairy covering of short, closely matted hairs). The
gills are adnate (fused to the stem), and distantly spaced, with about 15–19 gills reaching the stem. The gills are up to broad, thin, and the same color as the cap or paler.
Microscopic characteristics The
spores are broadly
ellipsoid, smooth, colorless,
amyloid (
staining bluish to blue-black when treated with
Melzer's reagent), thin-walled, and measure 8–9 by 5–6
μm. The
basidia are 40–60 by 10–12 μm, club-shaped, and four-spored. The cheilocystidia (
cystidia on the gill edge) are abundant, club-shaped, and measure 30–45 by 10–17 μm. Their tips are covered with one or more, knob-like short excrescences that are colorless and thin-walled. Pleurocystidia (cystidia on the gill face) are absent. The
hymenophoral tissue (tissue of the
hymenium-bearing structure) is made of thin-walled hyphae that are 12–21 μm wide, cylindrical (but often somewhat inflated), smooth, and contain cytoplasmic brownish pigment. These hyphae are dextrinoid, meaning that they stain reddish to reddish-brown in Melzer's reagent. The
cap cuticle is made of parallel, bent-over hyphae that are 2–7 μm wide, and cylindrical. These hyphae are smooth, or can be covered with scattered, warty or finger-like thin-walled
diverticulae that are colorless or pale brownish, and dextrinoid. The layer of hyphae underlying the cap cuticle is parallel, cylindrical, hyaline or brownish, and dextrinoid; it has short and inflated cells that are up to 48 μm wide. The stem cuticle is made of parallel, bent-over hyphae that are 3–8 μm wide, and similar to the hyphae of the cap cuticle. The caulocystidia (cystidia on the stem) are 45–88 by 5–8 μm, cylindrical, diverticulate, colorless or brownish, and thin-walled. The flesh of the stem is composed of longitudinally running, cylindrical hyphae that are 8–25 μm wide, smooth, colorless, and dextrinoid.
Clamp connections are present in the cap cuticle, the stem cuticle, the gill flesh, and at the basal
septa of the basidia.
Similar species Mycena clariviolacea is similar to the Brazilian species
M. cerasina and the European
M. diosma.
Mycena cerasina, which belongs in the section
Cerasinae of the genus
Mycena, differs in having a grayish-purple cap and stem, and forming somewhat
utriform (
wineskin-shaped) to
lageniform (flask-shaped), smooth cheilocystidia.
Mycena diosma, classified in the section
Calodontes, subsection
Purae, may be distinguished microscopically from
M. clariviolacea by its smooth, spindle-shaped cheilocystidia and pleurocystidia, and nondiverticulate hyphae in the cortical layer of cap and stem. ==Habitat and distribution==