Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
the long and short of it is that you will need to use your microscope, as always in inocybe. phillips ( , p. ) points out that inocybe hystrix and inocybe lanuginosa, for example, are easily confused in the field. the latter species has nodulose, funky spores that couldn't be more different from the
smooth, more or less elliptical spores of inocybe hystrix--but both mushrooms are brown and scaly, and there are other look-alikes, as well, including pholiota terrestris . description: ecology: mycorrhizal with hardwoods; growing alone, scattered, or gregariously; fall (and winter in california); widely...
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