Mushroom preserved

Mushroom preserved

Search Results for: Mushroom preserved
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cystoderma cinnabarinum (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > cystoderma > cystoderma cinnabarinum cystoderma cinnabarinum [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae > cystoderma . . . ] by michael kuo this attractive mushroom has a cinnabar cap that is covered with
covered by the partial veil . stem: - cm long; up to cm thick; more or less club-shaped; dry; smooth and whitish to pale cinnamon near the apex, but sheathed with cinnabar granular scales from the base upwards, the sheath terminating in a flimsy ring zone ; the granules often wearing away as the mushroom...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cystoderma_cinnabarinum.html
entoloma quadratum (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pink-spored > entolomatoid mushrooms > entoloma quadratum entoloma quadratum [ basidiomycota > agaricales > entolomataceae > entoloma . . . ] by michael kuo this bright, distinctive little mushroom, sometimes called the "unicorn
mushroom" in field guides, is found east of the rocky mountains, usually in conifer woods. when fresh, its colors are bright salmon orange, but it fades with age; older specimens can be confused with the similar, but yellow, entoloma murrayi . under the microscope, entoloma quadratum features cube-shaped...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/entoloma_quadratum.html
. . ] by michael kuo here is a fairly unmistakeable species of helvella featuring a convoluted black cap and an ornately fluted stem with cross-ribs and pockets. at first glance, helvella lacunosa is likely to be mistaken for something dried-up and blackened, but close inspection reveals a fresh mushroom
, quite beautiful in its ornateness and dark colors. helvella lacunosa is frequently parasitized by hypomyces cervinigenus and by the gilled mushroom clitocybe sclerotoidea . helvella mitra is a synonym. some mycologists (e.g. dissing) believe helvella sulcata to be merely a form of helvella lacunosa...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/helvella_lacunosa.html
crowd--until you examine its spores under the microscope. if you didn't know better, you would almost think you were looking at the stretched-out, nearly cylindrical spores of a bolete . its prominent cystidia are also distinctive--and, oh yeah, did i mention that inocybe lacera is a little brown mushroom
as though separating this mushroom from other species of inocybe weren't enough of a challenge, those wacky mycologists have gone and described a host of varieties and forms of inocybe lacera--including, in north america, var. heterosperma (with a spermatic, rather than mild, odor, and extremely variable...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/inocybe_lacera.html
laccaria amethystina (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > laccaria > laccaria amethystina laccaria amethystina [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > hydnangiaceae > laccaria . . . ] by michael kuo this little mushroom is easily recognized: it has thick purple gills, a white
spore print , and a small cap that is initially purple but soon fades to buff or brownish. it is found east of the rocky mountains, under hardwoods. for a similar mushroom found west of the rockies, see laccaria amethysteo-occidentalis . laccaria amethystina looks a little like a small cortinarius in...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laccaria_amethystina.html
methven took one look at the scan to the right, however, and put me on the right track--an illustration of several important points: the difference between real experts and ones who merely have web sites with the word "expert" in the title; the pitfalls of focusing too sharply on one feature of a mushroom
or a mushroom description; and the fact that slime dries out quickly in arid conditions. limacella glioderma (which is more properly known as limacella delicata var. glioderma) is distinct among other limacella species by virtue of its reddish brown cap, its dry stem that features shaggy zones of fibers...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/limacella_glioderma.html
macrocystidia cucumis (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > macrocystidia cucumis macrocystidia cucumis [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > marasmiaceae > macrocystidia . . . ] by michael kuo there is no denying that macrocystidia cucumis is an lbm ("little brown mushroom"), not likely to
attract the attention of most mushroom hunters. aside from the fact that it smells strongly of cucumbers or fish, it has few easily observed features separating it from dozens (even hundreds) of look-alikes--and it can't even muster up a stable spore print color to help narrow down the possibilities...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/macrocystidia_cucumis.html
california's salt point state park , i was eagerly collecting a cortinarius species that was growing everywhere (and which i have yet to identify, even to subgenus), when i noticed a little "gilled bolete" in sandy soil. not a big deal, i thought, and casually flipped it into the woods. later, at the soma mushroom
camp's foray tables, i mentioned finding a stupid little phylloporus to several local mushroom hunters--whose jaws dropped in disbelief....
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/phylloporus_arenicola.html