Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
, it can be found wherever oaks occur on our continent. the genus spongipellis, in theory, holds polypores that feature thick-walled spores that turn blue when mounted in cotton blue, along with two-layered, zoned flesh—but recent studies (tomsovsky , justo and collaborators, ) have not upheld the idea
with spongipellis pachyodon ) is not very closely related to the official "type species" of the genus spongipellis (spongipellis spumea). justo and collaborators ( ) place spongipellis in a new family, the cerrenaceae, which also contains cerrena unicolor , but the authors do not create a new genus for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/spongipellis_unicolor.html
base, and copious white to yellowish universal veil material on the cap and stem base. but unlike cortinarius caerulescens, cortinarius moënne-loccozii, cortinarius velicopia, or other similar species from europe and north america, the illinois mushroom features broadly ellipsoid to nearly round spores
, and a pungent, foul odor. for the most contemporary accounting of the european species in the caerulescens group, see knudsen & vesterholt ( ). north american species in the complex come primarily from kauffman ( ), including cortinarius velicopia and, potentially, cortinarius michiganensis and cortinarius...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cortinarius_sp_02.html