“…In the twentieth century, four sites in the years 1900-1950, and as many as 62 after 1950 were recorded, which is most probably a consequence of bigger interest in fungi and reflects our current state of knowledge. In some European countries, e.g., in Estonia [34], S. crocea is considered as regionally extinct (RE), or is known only from single or few localities, e.g., in Denmark, Finland, Italy, Latvia, Switzerland, Sweden, and Hungary [11,12,35,36].…”