Hygrophorus was first published in 1836 by Swedish mycologistElias Magnus Fries. The generic name is derived from the Greek ῦγρὁς + φόρος, with reference to the slimy caps found in many species. Fries subsequently split the genus into three subgenera: Limacium, Camarophyllus, and Hygrocybe. The last of these is now recognized as a genus in its own right, but was frequently included within Hygrophorus until the 1970s. Camarophyllus and Limacium were also raised to the rank of genus, but are regarded as synonyms of Hygrophorus. Camarophyllus sensu Singer is, however, a synonym of Hygrocybe.
Fruit bodies of Hygrophorus species are all agaricoid, most having smooth caps that are viscid to glutinous when damp. The lamellae beneath the cap are usually distant, thick, waxy, and broadly attached to decurrent. The stems of Hygrophorus species often have traces of a glutinous veil, sometimes forming an equally glutinous ring or ring-zone. The spore print is white. Microscopically, Hygrocybe species lack true cystidia and have smooth, inamyloidbasidiospores.
Habitat and distribution
Species of Hygrophorus are ectomycorrhizal, most forming associations with trees and hence typically found in woodlands. Many appear to be host specific, Hygrophorus cossus, for example, occurring with oak and H. speciosus with larch. Species are distributed worldwide, from the tropics to the sub-polar regions. Around 100 have been described to date.
As food
Fruit bodies of a few species are considered edible and are collected and consumed locally in Spain and eastern Europe, China and Bhutan, and Central America.
Literature
No comprehensive monograph of the genus has yet been published. In Europe, however, species of Hygrophorus have been illustrated and described in an Italian guide by Candusso. European species have also been covered, more briefly, in descriptive French keys by Bon. Dutch species were illustrated and described by Arnolds. No equivalent modern guides have been published for North America, the most recent being by Hesler & Smith. There is, however, a guide to Californian species by Largent. In Australia, Hygrophorus species have been illustrated and described by Young and in New Zealand by Horak.