Salep not sliced

Salep not sliced

Search Results for: Salep not sliced
however: the oregon species has "rare to occasional" clamp connections (bessette et al. )—or, in the collection i have studied, none (at least, in the amount of time i'm willing to devote to isolating and examining hyphal septa on a thursday morning in late september); additionally the oregon species is not
; close; short-gills frequent; whitish, sometimes staining or discoloring yellow, especially toward the cap margin. stem : – cm long; – cm thick; equal, or slightly swollen in the middle; bald; dry; whitish, developing brownish stains in places; basal mycelium white. flesh: white; unchanging when sliced...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/tricholoma_arvernense.html
broadly attached to the stem; close; short-gills frequent; yellow to yellowish orange. stem: – cm long; – cm thick; equal; dry; slightly fibrillose in places; pale yellow, staining orangish where handled; basal mycelium pale yellow. flesh: yellow to pale yellow; turning slightly brownish in places when sliced
. odor and taste : odor fragrant; taste not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh instantly dark brownish red on cap surface. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores – x – μm; subglobose to sublacrymoid, with a tiny apiculus; smooth; hyaline in koh; inamyloid. cheilocystidia – x – μm; cylindric...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/tricholomopsis_sulphureoides.html
it can be distinguished from other species of gyromitra by its geographic range, its large, white stem, its heavily stuffed and chambered interior, and its cap, which is reddish brown and rather tightly stuck to the stem. the cap surface is tightly wrinkled, and the cap shape is never lobed. when sliced
widely distributed in eastern north america from kansas to the east coast, but especially common in the south and in the mississippi and ohio watersheds (the northern edge of its range appears to be the southern great lakes). cap: - cm high; - cm wide; variable in shape but usually more or less round; not...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/gyromitra_caroliniana.html
young. pore surface: bright yellow to creamy when young, becoming yellowish brown; bruising brown when young; with - angular pores per mm; tubes to cm deep. stem: absent. flesh: reddish brown; soft and watery at first, becoming tougher with age; faintly zoned or streaked (when young specimens are sliced
the flesh is reminiscent of the flesh in fistulina hepatica ). odor and taste : odor not distinctive; taste tangy or sour. chemical reactions : flesh and cap surface red to maroon, then quickly black with koh. spore print : not documented; probably yellowish to brownish. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/inonotus_quercustris.html
short distance, the underside of the cap can almost appear to be a solid surface (especially if your vision is as bad as mine). other white, acrid species of lactarius frequently found under eastern hardwoods include lactarius piperatus (virtually identical to the naked eye, but with milk that does not
soft; white or whitish, sometimes discoloring a little yellowish or brownish with age. gills: beginning to run down the stem; very crowded; forking frequently; pale cream. stem: - cm long; - cm thick; white; tapering to base; bald; without potholes; solid. flesh: white; thick; hard; unchanging when sliced...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lactarius_glaucescens.html
white; edges serrated. stem: - cm long; - cm wide; equal, or with a slightly swollen or tapered base; dry; finely scaly or laterally ridged, with scales becoming reddish brown toward the base; without a ring ; whitish to brownish; very tough. flesh: white to pinkish white; very tough; unchanging when sliced
. odor and taste : odor not distinctive, or somewhat fragrant; taste not distinctive. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores - x - μ; subcylindric; smooth; thin-walled; hyaline in koh; inamyloid. basidia -spored. hymenial cystidia basidiole-like to hypha-like. pileipellis a cutis. hyphal...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/neolentinus_ponderosus.html
rocky mountains, where it appears in july and august on the deadwood of quaking aspen . look for the dark brown, finely fuzzy surfaces of the cap and stem, and the long tap root extending underground or into the rotting wood. since it is the only xeruloid species in its range, paraxerula americana is not
tapering a little to apex; brown to grayish brown and finely velvety to hairy throughout development; sometimes staining yellow to rusty orange where handled; with a long, tapered tap root extending up to cm underground; the tap root sometimes bruising rusty brown. flesh: whitish; unchanging when sliced...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/paraxerula_americana.html
elaborately veined. under the microscope, its cheilocystidia are "rostrate" (featuring a single, finger-like to beak-like apical projection). microscopic examination is probably necessary to confirm identification, since several species of pluteus can occasionally develop veined cap centers but do not
elaborately) center, but occasionally smooth. gills: free from the stem; close; short-gills frequent; whitish at first, becoming pinkish. stem: - cm long; - mm thick; equal; fragile; bald or silky; whitish, becoming gray to brownish from the base upward. flesh: insubstantial; whitish; unchanging when sliced...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/pluteus_thomsonii.html
stropharia melanosperma (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > stropharioid mushrooms > stropharia melanosperma stropharia melanosperma [ basidiomycota > agaricales > strophariaceae > stropharia. . . ] by michael kuo widespread in north america but not often reported, stropharia
faces. stem : – cm long; – mm thick; equal above a slightly swollen base; bald or very finely fibrillose in places; with a high, tight ring that features a lined upper edge and which catches grayish-purplish spore dust in mature specimens; whitish; basal mycelium white. flesh: white; unchanging when sliced...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/stropharia_melanosperma.html
spruce-fir forests (agaricus augustus appears under coastal conifers, usually in urban or semi-urban locations). agaricus guru rick kerrigan ( ) documents a difference in spore size between the two species (slightly larger for agaricus julius); however, the colorado collections i have studied have not
without a pink stage); when in the button stage covered with a thin, white partial veil . stem: – cm long; – cm thick; equal or slightly swollen toward the base, which is often deeply sunken in the substrate; scurfy below the ring; with a thick white ring ; brownish. flesh: white; unchanging when sliced...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/agaricus_julius.html