The
cap is broad, initially obtuse to convex, later becoming broadly
umbonate. Eventually the cap flattens, sometimes with the disc (the central region of the cap) slightly depressed. The cap margin initially touches the
stem; as it expands it becomes somewhat wavy. The extreme margin is marked by small lines, grooves or ridges when the cap is moist. The cap is initially covered with white powdery granules, but this later sloughs off to leave a smooth surface. The disc is brownish when young, but soon develops reddish tones; older specimens are
bay to
Isabella, with lighter-colored margins. The
flesh is
buff-colored, and oozes an orange-yellow juice when cut. The
gills have an
adnate attachment to the stem. They have a close to moderately crowded spacing, with between 23 and 26 gills reaching the
stem. The gills are narrow to moderately broad,
chamoisee when young, somewhat darker in age, with edges that are
maroon, and either crenulate (finely scalloped) or even. The stem is long, 2–3 mm thick, and more or less equal in width throughout. The stem base is rooted among the leaves and debris, and the base is covered with short stiff hairs pressed flat against the surface. Its surface is covered sparsely with minute purplish brown fibrils. The stem is dull reddish brown overall, but the color fades near the top. When mushroom tissue is cut or injured, it oozes a dull reddish-brown juice or, in old specimens, a dull orange juice.
M. atkinsoniana mushrooms have no distinctive taste or odor. The
spores are narrowly to broadly ellipsoid,
amyloid (
staining black to blue-black in
Melzer's reagent), and measure 7–9 by 4–5 μm. The
basidia (spore-bearing cells) are four-spored and measure 28–30 by 6–7 μm.
Cheilocystidia are plentiful, and arranged so as to form a sterile band on the edge of the gill. Measuring, they are narrowly
fusoid (tapered at each end), smooth, and have dark reddish contents. The pleurocystidia (cystidia on the gill face) similar in appearance to the cheilocystidia but far less abundant. Gill tissue is yellowish to very faintly
vinaceous-brown when stained with
iodine. The tissue of the cap consists of several layers. The outer surface comprises a thin
cuticle made of narrow hyphae filled with dark-reddish material. Underlying this layer this is a region of
vesiculose (swollen like a bladder) cells, while the remainder of the cap tissue consists of narrower woolly hyphae. Both layers of tissue beneath the cuticle will stain very faintly vinaceous-brown in iodine; the stem tissue, in contrast, stains dark
vinaceous-brown in iodine.
Similar species The "bleeding" will distinguish
Mycena atkinsoniana from most other
Mycena species commonly encountered. The common and widely distributed
M. sanguinolenta is another "bleeder", but it is smaller than
M. atkinsonia, with a cap diameter ranging from . Additionally, it has distantly spaced gills and a stem that is the same color as the cap, and a dark red juice.
M. atkinsoniana is also similar in stature to
M. pelianthina (a non-bleeding species), but several field characteristics distinguish
M. pelianthina, including a radish-like odor and taste, a purplish to lilac-colored cap, and purple-gray gills with dark purple edges. ==Habitat and distribution==