
Mycena tintinnabulum - Hat diameter 10 to 20 mm. Hemispherical in shape at the young, dullly bell-shaped, later arched to the outstretched. In gray-brown, brown, dark-red brown to black-brown, light-free whitish. On the surface, radially striated, when moist sticky, silky gloss. The shore of young sporocarps rolled up.
Lamellae in youth, gray-white color, later mixed with a shade of pink. Wavy on the blade. Adnate simple or slightly convergent.
Shaft in the shape of a cylindrical, bent, tubular. Height 10 to 70 mm and thickness 1 to 3 mm. In the color whitish, quickly gray-brown, at the base brown-red, at the base lighter. Surface at the top is smooth, at the base covered with thick, sticking hairs.
Flesh thin, quite hard, in the stipe cartilaginous. White, beige. Musty and earthy smell, bitter or tart flavor.
Occurrence: In deciduous and mixed forests, also in parks, on trunks and fallen branches of deciduous trees, primarily beech, oak, alder. In dense tufts of several to several dozen fruiting bodies. In winter, from December to March.
Value: Unaffected fungus.