Mushroom prepared

Mushroom prepared

Search Results for: Mushroom prepared
although it may be limited to conifers. the species was rarely recorded until , when publication of tricholomas of north america (bessette et al.) provided the name and a photo for a larger-than-just-specialists audience; now the name is often applied to photos in online venues like inaturalist and mushroom
"this person thinks the mushroom in this photo looks like tricholoma subluteum" is as far as that science is going. so, if you'd like to help science figure out this species, please take careful note of the trees in the vicinity, and save your collection in a local herbarium (or, if you want, my herbarium...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/tricholoma_subluteum.html
cordyceps ophioglossoides (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > mycotrophs > cordyceps ophioglossoides major groups > clubs & corals > cordyceps ophioglossoides cordyceps ophioglossoides [ ascomycetes > hypocreales > clavicipitaceae > cordyceps . . . ] by michael kuo species of cordyceps are my mushroom
hunting nemeses. as far as i am concerned, they are about as cool as mushrooms can get; some of them parasitize underground puffballs, while the rest attack insects. but the challenge for a mushroom hunter is to recognize cordyceps in the woods and manage to dig up, collect and/or photograph the parasitized...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cordyceps_ophioglossoides.html
lysurus periphragmoides (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > stinkhorns > lysurus periphragmoides lysurus periphragmoides [ basidiomycota > phallales > phallaceae > lysurus . . . ] by michael kuo although the name "lysurus periphragmoides" has usually been applied to a very different mushroom (see lysurus
because of confusion with lysurus species ; originally described from mauritus; also known from asia; summer, or, in warm climates, year round. the illustrated and described collection is from the philippines. fruiting body: initially a brown "egg" up to about cm wide and cm high; emerging to form a mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lysurus_periphragmoides.html
mycena pura (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > mycenoid mushrooms > mycena pura mycena pura [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae > mycena . . . ] by michael kuo one of the most beautiful species of mycena , this widely distributed mushroom is found decomposing
occasionally under hardwoods) across north america. it features a strong, radishlike odor and taste, and a cap that is convex, flat, or broadly bell-shaped at maturity. the colors of this species are extremely variable. when young and fresh, there is almost always lilac or purple involved--but as the mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/mycena_pura.html
pseudovernalis psathyrella pseudovernalis [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > coprinaceae > psathyrella . . . ] by michael kuo one of several springtime species of psathyrella , psathyrella pseudovernalis appears in hardwood forests, often at about the same time as yellow morels . it is a fragile, brown mushroom
species of psathyrella; it features fusoid-ventricose (rather than utriform) hymenial cystidia, and gill edges bearing few cheilocystidia but many sphaeropedunculate elements. the name "psathyrella vernalis," as it is applied by moser ( , ) and by hansen & knudsen ( ), probably represents the same mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/psathyrella_pseudovernalis.html
sparassis radicata (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > clubs & corals / polypores > sparassis radicata sparassis radicata: the western cauliflower mushroom [ basidiomycetes > polyporales > sparassidaceae > sparassis . . . ] by michael kuo sparassis radicata--like its eastern counterparts sparassis crispa
; smith, smith & weber, ; arora, ; states, ; wang et al., ; stamets, ; miller & miller, ; kuo, .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , february). sparassis radicata: the western cauliflower mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/sparassis_radicata.html
spathularia flavida var. ramosa (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > clubs & corals / oddballs & misfits > spathularia flavida var. ramosa spathularia flavida var. ramosa [ ascomycota > rhytismatales > cudoniaceae > spathularia ... ] by michael kuo found in the rocky mountains, this interesting mushroom
; the suggestion of microglossum over spathularia further supports the idea that the mushroom in question is often three-dimensionally club-shaped. while mycologists since mains have tended to collapse var. ramosa into synonymy with a broadly-conceived spathularia flavida, i have resurrected the name...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/spathularia_flavida_ramosa.html
to a canvas of browns. and: suillus pictus is one of the few suillus mushrooms that doesn't suffer from whatever rare disease it is that makes their slime-o-factory glands overproduce. true enough--but it's still a suillus. so i leave you to make your own judgments about this admittedly beautiful mushroom
roody & bessette, ; roody, ; mcneil, ; miller & miller, ; kuo, .) herb. kuo , . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. hypomyces completus suillus pictus is the most common host for hypomyces completus, a white fungus that eventually parsitizes the whole mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/suillus_pictus.html
amanita pantherina (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > amanita > amanita pantherina amanita pantherina [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > amanitaceae > amanita . . . ] by michael kuo as with so many north american species of amanita , the west-coast mushroom described and
primarily with conifers, and has a variable cap that ranges from dark brown to pale tan or nearly yellowish (creating confusion with amanita gemmata ). amanita expert rod tulloss has provided preliminary documentation for a putative species he has provisionally named ( ); it may correspond to the mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita_pantherina.html
amanita smithiana is fairly easily distinguished from all but its closest look-alikes, since it features a covering of thin, soft universal veil powder on its cap. the problem is that in rainy conditions, the soft universal veil material can be washed away. since amanita smithiana is a fairly common mushroom
in the conifer woods of the pacific northwest, it can be mistaken, in its smooth-capped state, for the matsutake, tricholoma murrillianum . experienced mushroom hunters are not likely to mistake amanita smithiana for a matsutake, but may still find it difficult to identify with precision, since it belongs...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita_smithiana.html