Search Results for: Jerusalem artichokes not sliced
volva encasing the base of the stem like a sack. its cap was dry and silky, and its stem was finely fuzzy. there were two specimens, growing from the ground near the edge of a dirt road, under both hardwoods and conifers. i took a few notes, made an identification, and preserved the collection. i did not
own a camera back then, and though i sometimes drew or painted my collections, i shied away from white mushrooms because my coloring and painting skills were not up to that task. so i made no illustration of the little mushrooms, and they sat in my herbarium , unnoticed and unappreciated, for more than...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/volvariella_hypopithys.html
microscope, it features very funky, swollen-fusiform spores. ampulloclitocybe clavipes is similar, but grows on the ground, is usually paler, and features very different, ellipsoid spores. i am following bigelow ( a) and gregory ( ) in applying the name avellaneialba to the species described here, but i am not
"avellaneous" is best translated to "hazel" in contemporary english—not at all a good match for the cap color of the mushroom currently called ampulloclitocybe avellaneialba. additionally, murrill describes the spores as "globose," and while murrill is not known for his microscopic rigor, even his microscope...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/ampulloclitocybe_avellaneialba.html