Mushrooms of the genus agaricus

Mushrooms of the genus agaricus

Search Results for: Mushrooms of the genus agaricus
the genus laccaria (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > laccaria the genus laccaria [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > hydnangiaceae . . . ] by michael kuo laccaria species form a fairly easily recognized group of white-spored mushrooms. the gills are often thick and a little
waxy, and are usually purple, pinkish, or (caucasian) flesh-colored. the cap colors range from whitish to, more commonly, orangish brown or reddish brown--while a few species are purple. laccarias are never slimy, which helps in separating them from the waxy caps , and their gills are attached to the...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laccaria.html
the genus melanoleuca (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > melanoleuca the genus melanoleuca [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae . . . ] by michael kuo i mean no disrespect to anyone whose studies are devoted to melanoleuca, but i find these mushrooms to be
melanoleuca" turns out to be after the first couple of times. most melanloleucas can be identified to genus without recourse to microscopic examination, through a combination of features: terrestrial habitat; white spore print ; nearly flat cap; tough, slender stem; gills close or crowded, attached to...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/melanoleuca.html
clitopilus popinalis (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pink-spored > entolomatoid mushrooms > clitopilus popinalis clitopilus popinalis [ basidiomycota > agaricales > entolomataceae > clitopilus . . . ] by michael kuo the eastern north american version of clitopilus popinalis (also
the bitter taste, and the fact that a drop of koh applied to any surface on the mushroom turns red. but while this entolomatoid mushroom is fairly easy to identify, figuring out which name to give it is not an easy task. if such things interest you, here goes: which genus name?...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/clitopilus_popinalis.html
th century; here in north america it turns out to be limited to roughly the eastern half of north america, from about the great lakes to the gulf coast and the east coast—although it has also been reported from northern california. it grows in tightly packed clusters, usually on the wood of hardwoods
ago, there were two north american honey mushrooms: armillaria mellea and armillaria tabsescens —and the genus armillaria held many mushrooms. this state of affairs was too easy for mycologists, however. someone had to go and point out that armillaria contained many mushrooms that differed widely in...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/armillaria_mellea.html
the boletes (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > boletes the boletes [ basidiomycota > boletales > boletinae . . . ] by michael kuo imagine taking the cardboard tube from a roll of paper towels, and affixing a lot of seeds to the inside of the tube. then repeat the procedure with many other tubes, and
glue them together. suspend all the tubes from a board, so they hang downward--then wait for the seeds fall out. somewhere along the long line of natural history, the boletes decided that this would be the most successful way to survive. their caps look like the caps of the gilled mushrooms (a group...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/boletes.html
the genus armillaria (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > armillaria the genus armillaria [ basidiomycota > agaricales > physalaciaceae . . . ] by michael kuo the genus armillaria contains wood-rotting gilled mushrooms with white spore prints and gills that are attached
to the stem or run down it. most of the species have a partial veil , but the veil can manifest in several different forms—from cob-webby ring zones to full-blown rings . roughly a dozen species occur in north america. many of these are parasitic , and many form visible black rhizomorphs in the wood...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/armillaria.html
the genus hypomyces (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > oddballs & misfits > hypomyces the genus hypomyces [ ascomycetes > hypocreales > hypocreaceae > . . . ] by michael kuo the species in hypomyces are fungi that parasitize mushrooms, covering them with powders, pimply crusts, and so on. often the
parasite fungus so transforms the host mushroom that it's impossible to tell what the host was. the lobster mushroom , for example, is a russula or lactarius mushroom that has been covered with a bright orange hypomyces species, hypomyces lactifluorum . six of the most commonly collected hypomyces species...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hypomyces.html
buying requests for sellers new added buying requests display new products post selling leads upload videos premium membership global buyer search register sign in hoyman group (hk) limited home products trade leads company profile contact hoyman group (hk) limited is incorporated in , invested in the
fields of mushrooms processing, woodworking, bamboo exploiting, embroidery fabric and lace, stationery and sports goods. gel pen with porcelain ball-normal gel ink pen with porcelain ball-yuanmeng gel ink pen with porcelain ball-biz desk-top gel pen with ceramic ball company profile membership: on ecplaza...
https://hoymangroup.en.ecplaza.net/
don't bet the house on my identification, however; the photos were sent to me from australia in e-mails, and i have made my best guess, using a -year-old source, without actually examining the mushrooms. normally, pages at this website represent north american mushrooms i have collected and/or studied
--but i'm always willing to make exceptions for stinkhorns (see lysurus corallocephalus for an african example). the fused arms that form a stem-like structure define the genus colus, but species within the genus "are not clear cut," according to stinkhorn expert d. m. dring ( ). colus hirudinosus is...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/colus_pusillus.html
the genus agrocybe (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > agrocybe the genus agrocybe [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > bolbitiaceae . . . ] by michael kuo the mushrooms in agrocybe have brown spore prints and are small to medium-sized, saprobic species that grow in grass,
wood chips, dung, garden mulch, or in woods--either terrestrially, or from deadwood. they are not subject to rapid decay (in contrast to the mushrooms in bolbitius), and the caps, with a few exceptions, are dry. unlike species of conocybe, agrocybe species have convex to flat caps. in my area (central...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/agrocybe.html