Mushrooms other than of the genus agaricus

Mushrooms other than of the genus agaricus

Search Results for: Mushrooms other than of the genus agaricus
laccaria trullissata (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > laccaria > laccaria trullissata laccaria trullissata [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > hydnangiaceae > laccaria . . . ] by michael kuo this interesting species of laccaria can be found in sand dunes on the east coast
, the gulf coast, and along the great lakes. its habitat and its thick, purple gills distinguish it from just about anything else--though if you are in eastern canada, the similar sand-loving laccaria maritima can only be reliably separated with a microscope (details below). lacaria trullisata" (with...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laccaria_trullissata.html
fungi without peer review or editing and, while these names are sometimes "legitimate" by the rules of the international code of nomenclature, they do not represent accepted standards of scientific publishing. while some of the new names published at the index probably represent good science, others
to be seen; dna testing would be required." a year later, in , zhao, wu & yang published a paper in phytotaxa establishing the genus rubroboletus, on the basis of a -gene analysis, for a group of boletes that share red caps, red pore surfaces, red ornamentation on the stems, and blue bruising. several...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/ifnovelties.html
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the same species or not. . it was in the middle of the year when the fossil specimen which was associated with dire wolf, was first found. . the fossil was recovered from ohio river bed near indiana's evansville. . the fossil specimen was made of only of a jawbone along with cheek-teeth and it belong
was the c. dirus, which was used back in by leidy. . campbell merriam had the notion that c. indianenis was nothing more than a synonym of c. dirus. . merriam's notion was backed by another paleontologist in the year . this other paleontologist was edward troxell. dire wolf facts: proposal of a different...
https://factslegend.org/65-amazing-dire-wolf-facts-real/
mushroomexpert.com) major groups > polypores > daedalea quercina daedalea quercina [ basidiomycetes > polyporales > fomitopsidaceae > daedalea . . . ] by michael kuo daedalea quercina, as its species name suggests, is partial to oaks. it is a distinctive polypore with a thickly maze-like pore surface (as its genus
name suggests; daedalus designed the maze that hid the minotaur) and a whitish to grayish or brownish cap surface. the tough flesh is whitish to pale brownish--but never rusty brown or dark brown. species of gloeophyllum can look somewhat similar, but feature brown to rusty brown flesh and gill-like...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/daedalea_quercina.html
melanoleuca graminicola (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > melanoleuca > melanoleuca graminicola melanoleuca graminicola [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae > melanoleuca . . . ] by michael kuo found in grassy areas and disturbed ground, melanoleuca graminicola
is a small, brown melanoleuca that lacks the distinctive harpoon-like cystidia found on the gills of most species in the genus. a microscope will thus be required to identify it--and if you decide to forego microscopic analysis and simply call your little brown specimen " melanoleuca melaleuca " i can...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/melanoleuca_graminicola.html
prehistoric ancestors of many organisms including mammals, reptiles, birds and more . but what of fungi?
not much was known to have survived which is perhaps odd given the plant like structures we see today, but on closer examination tiny microscopic threads (hyphae) have been found as fossils and remains captured in amber - though there is often debate over whether this type of structure is a true fungus...
https://www.aspergillus.org.uk/content/prehistoric-fungi
colpoma quercinum (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > cup fungi > colpoma quercinum colpoma quercinum [ ascomycota > rhytismatales > rhytismataceae > colpoma ... ] by michael kuo this fascinating little fungus is "erumpent," which the dictionary of the fungi (kirk et al., ) defines as "bursting through
the surface of the substratum." if you have seen the film alien, you may recall actor john hurt playing the substrate for an erumpent extraterrestrial. colpoma quercinum does more or less the same thing to oak twigs, shoving itself through the bark, then opening its spore-bearing surface. the mature...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/colpoma_quercinum.html
> crust fungi > thelephora terrestris thelephora terrestris [ basidiomycota > thelephorales > thelephoraceae > thelephora ... ] by michael kuo thelephora terrestris is an odd, spreading fungus that crawls through forest litter under conifers, making fan-shaped caps in little clusters and rosettes. the
caps are typically a shade of fairly dark brown, with whitish margins (when fresh); the undersides of the caps are bald but wrinkled, often into tight little bumps. under the microscope, thelephora terrestris features angular, spiny spores and brownish, clamped tramal elements. thelephora americana...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/thelephora_terrestris.html
retiboletus ornatipes (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > boletes > boletus > retiboletus ornatipes retiboletus ornatipes [ basidiomycota > boletales > boletaceae > retiboletus . . . ] by michael kuo this is a striking bolete with a yellow, prominently reticulate stem (the species epithet ornatipes means
"ornate-stemmed") and a yellow to brown cap. its surfaces do not bruise blue, and its cap surface turns dark red to dark reddish brown with koh . it grows under oaks and other hardwoods in eastern north america. retiboletus griseus is similar, but features white flesh, a cap that is never yellow and...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/retiboletus_ornatipes.html