Spores used for sowing

Spores used for sowing

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this mushroom represents what would happen if the addams family got hold of the idea. it's creepy and its kooky, mysterious and spooky. it's altogether ooky . . . camarops petersii. for more of uncle fester's lawn decorations, see pisolithus tinctorius and scleroderma polyrhizum . camarops petersii looks
eyelid is a veil that protects the young mushroom but soon ruptures to expose the spore-producing surface. the range of camarops petersii in north america extends from eastern north america to at least kansas and cuba. description: ecology: saprobic on the decorticated wood of fallen oaks (early records for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/camarops_petersii.html
conocybe siennophylla (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > conocybe > conocybe siennophylla conocybe siennophylla [ basidiomycota > agaricales > bolbitiaceae > conocybe . . . ] by michael kuo defining features for conocybe siennophylla include the yellowish-brownish cap
like bowling pins (the cystidia on the gills' edges, however, are shaped like bowling pins). if painstaking microscopy does not interest you, i will certainly not blame you if you take a bye on conocybe identification. conocybe velutipes is virtually identical to the naked eye, but features larger spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/conocybe_siennophylla.html
entoloma murrayi is a distinctive little mushroom. typically found in swamps or wet woods east of the rocky mountains, it has a conical, yellow cap with a prominent, extended point and a silky texture; a yellow stem; and a pink spore print . under the microscope, the species features cube-shaped spores
pointed center; silky; bright to dull yellow, with the uplifted center often becoming white; dry or somewhat sticky when fresh; the margin becoming lined and/or tattered with age. gills: narrowly attached to the stem; close or nearly distant; whitish to pale yellow at first, becoming pink as the spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/entoloma_murrayi.html
hericium fruits from dead hardwood logs and stumps, sometimes in huge patches that can be seen from quite some distance. it is recognized by its short (mostly about cm long) spines, and the fact that the spines hang in rows along delicate branches. under the microscope it features very small, amyloid spores
. hericium americanum is similar. it also hangs its spines from branches, but the spines are typically longer than cm—and, under the microscope, its spores are substantially larger. in older treatments hericium coralloides will be found as "hericium ramosum" and, confusingly, hericium americanum will...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hericium_coralloides.html
castor cotton gaur gram groundnut jute lentil lucerne mustard maize napier grass oats rice sannhemp sesamum sorghum soyabean sugarbeet sugarcane safflower sunflower tobacco wheat mustard climatic requirements | season | soil | variety india ranks first in the world in respect of acreage, accounting for
percent of the world total and second in terms of the production. in india uttar pradesh alone produces about percent of total mustard producion of india. climatic requirements mustard is the crop of tropical as well as temperate zones and require somewhat cool and dry weather for satisfactory growth...
http://www.agroecommerce.com/Agroecommerce/BriefInfo/Crops/Mustardinfo.asp