Chilled mushrooms

Chilled mushrooms

Search Results for: Chilled mushrooms
crust fungi (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > crust fungi crust fungi by michael kuo i'm using the unscientific term "crust fungi" to refer to various wood-decomposing mushrooms that have a smooth to pimpled or wrinkled spore-bearing surface; they lack the pores that typify polypores , or the teeth
that typify the toothed mushrooms . one good way to see the difference is to compare two classic and common wood rotters: the polypore trametes versicolor and the crust fungus stereum ostrea (sometimes called the "turkey tail" and the "false turkey tail," respectively). from above these mushrooms look...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/crusts.html
gymnopus dryophilus (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > collybioid > gymnopus dryophilus gymnopus dryophilus [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > marasmiaceae > gymnopus . . . ] by michael kuo this little mushroom qualifies as the weed of the north american mushroom world,
examine something that looked interesting . . . only to discover that, once again, it was just gymnopus dryophilus, posing as something interesting. a large number of gymnopus and rhodocollybia species look for all the world like gymnopus dryophilus on casual observation. for help sorting these mushrooms...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/gymnopus_dryophilus.html
hebeloma crustuliniforme (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > hebeloma > hebeloma crustuliniforme hebeloma crustuliniforme [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > bolbitiaceae > hebeloma . . . ] by michael kuo in the wide sense, "hebeloma crustuliniforme" is a mycorrhizal associate
defined species were not clearly differentiated genetically. specimens identified as hebeloma helodes and hebeloma pusillum, for example, did not necessarily line up with other putatively identical specimens. the researchers were able to define two well supported groups, however--one corresponding to mushrooms...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hebeloma_crustuliniforme.html
lepiota clypeolaria (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > lepiotoid mushrooms > lepiota clypeolaria lepiota clypeolaria [ basidiomycota > agaricales > agaricaceae > lepiota . . . ] by michael kuo the name lepiota clypeolaria has been widely used to describe a small to medium-sized
spindle-shaped spores. however, dna research by vellinga ( , a) reveals at least two species matching this description: the "true" lepiota clypeolaria and lepiota magnispora (which is further divided into at least three genetic groupings). fortunately, there are physical differences between these mushrooms...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lepiota_clypeolaria.html
lepiota cristata (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > lepiotoid mushrooms > lepiota cristata lepiota cristata [ basidiomycota > agaricales > agaricaceae > lepiota . . . ] by michael kuo there are many small lepiotoid mushrooms that look more or less like this one, and
smith, ; smith, smith & weber, ; arora, ; kyde & peterson, ; phillips, / ; lincoff, ; vellinga, ; barron, ; akers & sundberg, ; vellinga, b; roody, ; vellinga, b; mcneil, ; miller & miller, ; kuo & methven, .) herb. kuo , , , , . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lepiota_cristata.html
leucocoprinus birnbaumii (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > lepiotoid mushrooms > leucocoprinus birnbaumii leucocoprinus birnbaumii [ basidiomycota > agaricales > agaricaceae > leucocoprinus . . . ] by michael kuo i receive many frantic e-mails about this little yellow
i have only seen it once, many years ago, before i began studying mushrooms in earnest. so i have no photos of fresh specimens of my own to share with you. however, many readers have documented and preserved collections, which they very kindly sent to me for study; these collections are featured here...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/leucocoprinus_birnbaumii.html
lyophyllum decastes (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > lyophyllum decastes group > lyophyllum decastes lyophyllum decastes [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae > lyophyllum . . . ] by michael kuo i don't know how many mushroom species are hiding out under
the name "lyophyllum decastes," but it wouldn't surprise me to find out there are several. just flip through your field guides and take a look at the pictures. then again, if we have learned anything from dna studies of mushrooms we have learned that the physical features of mushrooms (for example the...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lyophyllum_decastes.html
pholiota highlandensis (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > pholiota > pholiota highlandensis pholiota highlandensis species group [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > strophariaceae > pholiota . . . ] by michael kuo this group of pholiota species is partial to burned areas
, and the mushrooms appear in the years following the forest fire. most of the species grow in dense clusters, often at the charred bases of trees that were blackened but not killed--or from buried wood, appearing to be terrestrial. they have slimy caps, brown to cinnamon brown spore prints , and partial...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/pholiota_highlandensis.html
podaxis pistillaris (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > coprinoid / puffballs / oddballs > podaxis pistillaris podaxis pistillaris [ basidiomycota > agaricales > agaricaceae > podaxis . . . ] by michael kuo podaxis pistillaris is found in the deserts of western north
consists of poorly formed, contorted, gill-like plates that eventually erode into a very dark brown or nearly black spore powder. in fact it turns out that podaxis pistillaris is not all that closely related to coprinus comatus, despite superficial appearances; dna studies have placed it near lepiotoid mushrooms...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/podaxis_pistillaris.html
russula sanguinea (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > russula > russula sanguinea "russula sanguinea" in north america [ basidiomycetes > russulales > russulaceae > russula . . . ] by michael kuo i am treating "russula sanguinea" as a red-capped, red-stemmed, acrid russula
the west coast versions of russula sanguinea; while i doubt that it is truly distinct by virtue of spore dimensions and nothing else, it is a species name that represents an original collection from the pacific northwest (rather than europe). the strikingly red stems of west coast, sanguinea-like mushrooms...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/russula_sanguinea.html