Mushrooms of the genus agaricus broken

Mushrooms of the genus agaricus broken

Search Results for: Mushrooms of the genus agaricus broken
stropharia caerulea (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > stropharioid mushrooms > stropharia caerulea stropharia caerulea [ basidiomycota > agaricales > strophariaceae > stropharia. . . ] by michael kuo this species is so blue, and so gorgeous, that you'd think it would
be unmistakable. but a microscope is probably needed to separate it confidently from the very similar stropharia aeruginosa . the principle feature separating these two species is the sterile cells on the edges of the gills: in stropharia aeruginosa they are capitate and lack refractive contents, while...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/stropharia_caerulea.html
the genus laetiporus (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > polypores > laetiporus the genus laetiporus [ basidiomycota > polyporales > laetiporaceae . . . ] by michael kuo the genus laetiporus holds a relatively small group of soft-fleshed polypores that lack stems and, in all but one species and one variety
, demonstrate bright orange to yellow colors. most of the species, together, are commonly referred to as "chicken of the woods" mushrooms, and they cause a brown rot of the wood of both conifers and hardwoods (depending on the species). they are parasites and saprobes , apparently able to play either...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laetiporus.html
gymnopilus junonius (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > gymnopilus > gymnopilus junonius gymnopilus junonius [ basidiomycota > agaricales > strophariaceae > gymnopilus . . . ] by michael kuo this impressive mushroom is found growing in dense clusters on stumps and logs
of both hardwoods and conifers. it features a fairly large cap, bitter taste , a stem with a ring or ring zone , and an orange to brownish orange spore print . in fact the "spore print" often surrounds the mushrooms in nature, and it can be quite effusive. i once ruined a pair of jeans collecting gymnopilus...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/gymnopilus_junonius.html
cortinarius species (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > cortinarius > cortinarius species cortinarius species [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > cortinariaceae > cortinarius ... ] by michael kuo part of the hardwood-loving cortinarius caerulescens species group, this attractive
cortinarius appears in summer in the forests of central illinois, apparently in association with hickories . like the european species cortinarius caerulescens (first described in from germany) it features purple colors, a bulbous stem base, and copious white to yellowish universal veil material on...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cortinarius_sp_02.html
spongipellis unicolor (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > polypores > spongipellis unicolor spongipellis unicolor [ basidiomycota > polyporales > cerrenaceae > "spongipellis" . . . ] by michael kuo spongipellis unicolor is kind of a big, doinky doofus among the polypores . its large, spongy, buff-colored
cap usually appears alone, on the side of an oak tree. its pore surface is composed of large, angular pores that can become slot-like or even tooth-like in old age. it causes a white trunkrot, and while it is not often mentioned in field guides (perhaps because it's too much of a doofus?)...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/spongipellis_unicolor.html
growing on hardwood stumps, logs, and standing trees. it is easily recognized by its large size, its colors, the flattened scales on the cap, the black and velvety stem base (present on mature specimens), and its strongly mealy odor. although polyporus squamosus is annual (unlike some of the perennial
, woody-fleshed polypores), its fruiting bodies are quite durable and, given the right conditions, can last for many months. when this happens the mushrooms can look very different, and in fall specimens are sometimes encountered in which the scales have all-but vanished and the caps are essentially...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/polyporus_squamosus.html
mushroomexpert.com) major groups > jellies > phlogiotis helvelloides phlogiotis helvelloides [ basidiomycetes > tremellales > exidiaceae > phlogiotis . . . ] by michael kuo this distinctive jelly fungus is hard to describe, but not so hard to recognize. despite my usual cautions against identifying mushrooms
by comparing them to photographs, i have to admit that phlogiotis helvelloides is probably an exception. look at the picture, add a semi-gelatinous consistency--and, well, that's phlogiotis helvelloides. if you are worried about look-alikes, yank your putative phlogiotis helvelloides hard as you pick...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/phlogiotis_helvelloides.html
basidiomycota > polyporales > phanerochaetaceae > hapalopilus . . . ] by michael kuo here is a medium-sized, orange polypore found on oaks in eastern north america. its upper surface is finely fuzzy, and its undersurface features angular orange pores. it might be confused with laetiporus sulphureus , but the
latter species grows in shelving clusters and features a yellow pore surface. hapalopilus croceus is one of only a few species in the genus hapalopilus, which was traditionally defined on the basis of microscopic features (including a monomitic hyphal system with clamp connections) and the dramatic...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hapalopilus_croceus.html
tylopilus . . . ] by michael kuo this eastern north american bolete features a dark brown, velvety cap that usually becomes cracked and mosaic-like with age. its pore surface is whitish to grayish when young, but becomes pinkish brown with maturity—and its surfaces and flesh stain blue when bruised. under the
microscope, it features an impressive palisadoderm on its cap surface, spores generally measuring – μm in length, and hymenial cystidia that are filled with brown, globular material. tylopilus sordidus is part of a group of bolete species with dark brown colors and pinkish to reddish brown spore prints...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/tylopilus_sordidus.html