Mushrooms of the genus agaricus dried

Mushrooms of the genus agaricus dried

Search Results for: Mushrooms of the genus agaricus dried
the genus xylaria (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > clubs & corals > xylaria the genus xylaria [ ascomycota > sordariomycetes > xylariales > xylariaceae . . . ] by michael kuo the genus xylaria consists of funky, club-like decomposers of wood or plant debris that become black and hard by maturity,
reminiscent of carbon or charcoal. the mushrooms are "pyrenomycetes," which means they produce spores in asci that are embedded in tiny pockets called "perithecia"; the asci take turns growing into the narrow opening of the pocket so that they can shoot spores away from the fungus and into the air currents...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/xylaria.html
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north america but appears to be most common on the west coast and in the southern appalachians, based on online records from our continent's major herbaria. small, sparingly branched versions of tremellodendron schweinitzii (aka tremellodendron pallidum) and other, less well-known species of tremellodendron
day it was discovered. at issue is its placement relative to other groups of fungi. it has funky, interesting basidia (the prong-like structures on which spores are borne) that seem to be a combination of two well-established types. jelly fungi develop divided basidia, while other mushrooms that bear...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/tremellodendropsis_tuberosa.html
a fuzzy brownish stem, a white spore print , and a sticky, reddish brown to orangish brown cap. but there are five crucial things that separate the two species: flammulina populicola grows on the wood of quaking aspen and other poplars (members of the genus populus) in western north america, while flammulina
velutipes grows on the wood of various other hardwoods across north america (excepting the western poplars). flammulina populicola has shorter, wider spores that measure - x - μ (versus - x - μ for flammulina velutipes). the cells composing the surface of the cap (officially called the "terminal elements...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/flammulina_populicola.html
pluteus leoninus (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pink-spored > pluteus > pluteus leoninus pluteus leoninus [ basidiomycota > agaricales > pluteaceae > pluteus . . . ] by michael kuo like other species of pluteus , pluteus leoninus has a pink spore print and gills that are free
from the stem. it grows on or near the deadwood of hardwoods, and it is fairly easily distinguished from other species in the genus on the basis of its somewhat velvety yellowish cap, which usually features a brownish center, at least when young. it has a rather long stem, for a pluteus, and it tends...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/pluteus_leoninus.html
amanita populiphila (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > amanita > amanita populiphila amanita populiphila [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > amanitaceae > amanita . . . ] by michael kuo as its latin species name indicates, amanita populiphila is a "poplar-phile" and is associated
with aspens and cottonwoods--the true poplars, in the genus populus. it is a pale tan to yellowish or whitish member of the amanita vaginata group; like other members of the group it lacks a ring , develops a lined cap margin, and features a sacklike volva at the stem base. in the case of amanita populiphila...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita_populiphila.html