, seen through a microscope Adult
fruit bodies are initially cylindrical, maturing to trumpet- or vase-shaped and reaching up to 30 cm (12 in) in height and width. There is no clear demarcation between the
cap and
stipe. The stipe can be up to 15 cm (6 in) tall and wide, though it tapers to a narrower base. It is solid in younger specimens, though is often hollowed out by insect larvae in older. At higher elevations, two or three fruit bodies may arise from one stipe. Colored various shades of reddish- to yellowish-orange, the cap surface is broken into scales, with the spaces between more yellow and the scales themselves more orange. The most colorful specimens occur in warm humid weather. Older specimens are often paler. The white
flesh is fibrous and thick, though thins with age. Somewhat brittle, it can sometimes turn brown when cut or bruised. The smell has been reported as indistinct or "earthy and sweet", and the taste "sweet and sour". The
spore-bearing undersurface is irregularly folded, forked or ridged rather than gilled and is pale buff or yellowish to whitish in color. These ridges are up to high, and are decurrent—they extend below and run down the cap's attachment to the stipe, though irregularly so. The
spore print is brownish, the spores ellipsoid with dimensions of 12.4–16.8 × 5.8–7.3
μm. The spore surface is roughened with ornamentations that can be made visible under the microscope by
staining with
methyl blue. The fruit bodies can last for some considerable time, growing slowly over a month. Mushrooms in subalpine and alpine areas are typically heavy-set with a short stipe, their growth slower in the cold climate. This latter form is seen at lower altitudes in colder seasons. Smith gave this the name
forma rainierensis. Conversely, mushrooms at low altitudes, such as in the
redwood forests, can grow and expand rapidly with large caps that have prominent scales. Smith described a paler form with a solid stipe from the
Sierra Nevada as forma
wilsonii. American mycologist
R. H. Petersen described an olive-capped form that is otherwise identical to the typical form. These forms are not recognised as distinct.
Similar species The related
Turbinellus kauffmanii, found in western North America, is similar-looking but has a pale brown cap. Younger specimens of the latter species also have a pungent smell.
Turbinellus fujisanensis, found in Japan, is another lookalike that has smaller spores than
T. floccosus.
Gomphus clavatus is superficially similar. ==Distribution and habitat==