Mushroom spawn

Mushroom spawn

Search Results for: Mushroom spawn
gibba (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > clitocyboid mushrooms > infundibulicybe gibba infundibulicybe (clitocybe) gibba [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae > infundibulicybe...] by michael kuo infundibulicybe gibba is a hardwood-loving clitocyboid mushroom
like the cap, and slightly smaller spores. a giant version of this species, clitocybe maxima , is found in the rocky mountains and westward. clitocybe gibba is a well known synonym. the relatively recent genus infundibulicybe was established to reflect the fact that dna studies have placed this mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/infundibulicybe_gibba.html
laccaria amethysteo-occidentalis (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > laccaria > laccaria amethysteo-occidentalis laccaria amethysteo-occidentalis [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > hydnangiaceae > laccaria . . . ] by michael kuo look for this beautiful mushroom under conifers
see laccaria amethystina ). when young, laccaria amethysteo-occidentalis is easily recognized by its deep purple cap, thick purple gills, and its long, shaggy to grooved stem. it has a white spore print , which helps to separate it from some cortinarius species that are superficially similar. this mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laccaria_amethysteo-occidentalis.html
stinkhorn and would like to help out, please let me know at . thanks to charlotte whitaker, robin mountford, and sharon van zyl for sending photos of lysurus corallocephalus, and for permission to reproduce the images here. description: note: since i have not collected or studied collections of this mushroom
(saccardo, ; lloyd, ; dring, ; dring, ; coetzee, .) i have not collected or studied collections of this mushroom. this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , april). lysurus corallocephalus. retrieved from the mushroomexpert.com...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lysurus_corallocephalus.html
look like "mr. spatula" in a claymation kids movie about kitchen utensils. see spathulariopsis velutipes and spathularia flavida . species of hypomyces these fungi are parasitic on other fungi, and form a crust over their surfaces. sometimes the result is a severely transformed, mutant-like host mushroom
sometimes grotesque shapes, looking like a dust-covered stump. camarops petersii a tough, black, bumpy lump on a log--covered with a veil when young. dacryopinax elegans like miniature, fuzzy satellite dishes lined up on decaying hardwood logs. trichoderma peltatum small, cushion-shaped blob of a mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/oddballs.html
phlebia incarnata (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > crust fungi / polypores > phlebia incarnata phlebia incarnata [ basidiomycetes > polyporales > meruliaceae > phlebia . . . ] by michael kuo here is a gorgeous little mushroom with a very ugly name.
"phlebia incarnata" sounds like the flapping, flustered daughter who was never let out of the house--and the previous name for this mushroom, merulius incarnatus, wasn't much better. at any rate, it is found on hardwood logs from the mississippi watershed (where it is apparently most common) eastward...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/phlebia_incarnata.html
some of the less-stinky mushrooms in the russula foetentula species cluster, and some of the species clustered around russula sororia . however, russula ballouii is odorless, and has a dry cap and stem that are densely covered with brownish yellow to reddish pigment patches that break up as the mushroom
; summer, fall, and early winter; fairly widely distributed from texas to illinois and new york--but apparently less common in northeastern areas. cap: - cm; convex when young, later flat or broadly convex, with a central depression; dry; densely covered with pigment patches that break up as the mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/russula_ballouii.html
agaricus porphyrocephalus var. pallidus (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > agaricus > agaricus porphyrocephalus var. pallidus agaricus porphyrocephalus var. pallidus [ basidiomycota > agaricales > agaricaceae > agaricus . . . ] by michael kuo here's another mushroom
squat, and grows in grass—and it features flimsy veils and gills that are pink when young. in short, you won't be able to distinguish it from other members of the campestris group without a microscope; its spores, at about x μm, are shorter than those of look-alikes. although its dna indicates this mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/agaricus_porphyrocephalus_pallidus.html
boletus inedulis (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > boletes > boletus > boletus inedulis boletus inedulis [ basidiomycetes > boletales > boletaceae > boletus . . . ] by michael kuo this eastern mushroom is a study in interesting colors: the pale cap, yellow pore surface, pinkish red stem and white flesh
form a rather attractive combination--accentuated by the indigo blue bruising of the pore surface and the sky blue staining of the exposed flesh. the taste of this mushroom is bitter. several species, also bitter tasting, are similar in appearance; see the comments below for help separating boletus...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/boletus_inedulis.html
boletus zelleri (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > boletes > boletus > boletus zelleri boletus zelleri [ basidiomycetes > boletales > boletaceae > boletus . . . ] by michael kuo when fresh and young, the west coast's boletus zelleri is a stunning mushroom with a blackish brown cap, a red and yellow
begins to lose some of its pizzazz, but still retains much of its original glory. it is one of those boletes that can't make up its mind whether or not it wants to bruise and stain blue, so do not rely heavily on this character for identification--though i can't imagine you would need to, since the mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/boletus_zelleri.html
cantharellus coccolobae (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > chanterelles and trumpets > cantharellus coccolobae cantharellus coccolobae [ basidiomycota > cantharellales > cantharellaceae > cantharellus . . . ] by michael kuo when i think of mycorrhizal mushroom associations, i think of trees: oaks, spruces
, pines, and so on. but some mushroom species are mycorrhizal with berry bushes and, in the case of cantharellus coccolobae, sea grapes—tropical beach plants in the genus coccoloba that are usually more bush-like than tree-like. in physical features cantharellus coccolobae is similar to the well-known...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cantharellus_coccolobae.html