Spores used for sowing

Spores used for sowing

Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
collections the cap and stem are tawny brown to brick red--or paler, when faded by sunlight. like other species of cystoderma , cystoderma granulosum has a cap densely covered with granules which, as the mushroom matures, may begin to separate or wear away. there is no true ring on the stem, and the spores
are inamyloid . the lack of a ring and the inamyloid spores will help to separate cystoderma granulosum from other species in the genus, as will the lack of cystidia , and the presence of distinctive cells in the skin of the cap, which are chained together and have brownish to reddish brown walls when...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cystoderma_granulosum.html
features include a fairly small, faintly lined, brown cap that is initially planoconvex but develops a shallow central depression, in the middle of which a shallow hump remains; the fairly distant gills; the smooth stem; the mealy odor and taste; and microscopic features--including heterodiametric spores
becoming pink; short-gills frequent. stem: - cm long; - mm thick; equal; dry; bald or finely silky; whitish to grayish or brownish. flesh: thin; insubstantial; watery whitish to brownish. odor and taste : mealy. chemical reactions : koh on cap surface negative. spore print : pink. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/entoloma_caccabus.html
and south america), it is either extremely well traveled, or (more likely, in my opinion) actually a group of closely related, morphologically similar species. compare hygrocybe cantharellus with hygrocybe miniata , which has attached gills that do not run deeply down the stem, along with smaller spores
short-gills present. stem: - mm long; - mm thick; equal; dry or slightly tacky; bald; scarlet to reddish orange, with a yellowish base. flesh: yellowish to orangish; firm. odor and taste : not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh negative on cap surface. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hygrocybe_cantharellus.html
of many suillus species). it is associated with conifers--especially with firs--in western north america and in the northern regions of central and eastern north america. western versions, like the specimens described and illustrated here, are more robust than eastern versions, and feature larger spores
the lower portion, but soon dry; whitish; covered with tiny fibrous points (especially over the upper half) that darken to grayish brown with maturity or when the mushroom is dried. flesh: white; unchanging when sliced. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hygrophorus_pustulatus.html
anything else--though if you are in eastern canada, the similar sand-loving laccaria maritima can only be reliably separated with a microscope (details below). lacaria trullisata" (with one s) is a misspelling that has become virtually hegemonic. laccaria maritima has whitish basal mycelium, and spores
frequently splitting near the apex; colored like the cap; with purplish basal mycelium that you are unlikely to see beneath the covering of sand; often nearly entirely submerged in the sand. flesh: pale purplish or whitish. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laccaria_trullissata.html
important ways: it grows under spruces (rather than pines), its stem lacks pot-holes, and its cap is usually less zoned and more prone to green staining. lactarius fennoscandicus is another similar european species, also associated with spruces; its cap is usually more zonate and more brown, and its spores
developing green stains. flesh: dirty orange; staining slowly reddish orange. milk: carrot orange, becoming reddish after minutes or more; scant. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : undocumented by me; reported as "pale pinkish buff" by heilmann-clausen et al., . microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lactarius_deterrimus.html
microscopic features. when young, its rusty brown to orange-brown cap lacks woolly or scaly veil remnants--and as the cap matures, developing grayish, umbrella-like striations, the center area remains smooth and orangish brown. under the microscope, parasola auricoma features fairly large, ellipsoid spores
long; up to mm thick; more or less equal; fragile; hollow; bald or very finely silky; whitish to yellowish; without a ring . flesh: insubstantial; whitish to grayish. odor and taste : not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh negative on cap surface. spore print : blackish. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/parasola_auricoma.html
to fruit on the ground in places that have accumulated woody forest debris--which helps to separate it from several similar species of peziza that grow on dung or directly on rotting wood. under the microscope, peziza arvernensis (which will be called "peziza sylvestris" in many field guides) has spores
width of about cm across; upper surface brown and fairly smooth, sometimes becoming slightly wrinkled; under surface minutely velvety with whitish fuzz, at least when young; without a stem; attached to the substrate at a central location. odor none. flesh fragile and brittle. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/peziza_arvernensis.html
another mushroom you and your field guide have been calling " agaricus campestris ." it's white, squat, and grows in grass—and it features flimsy veils and gills that are pink when young. in short, you won't be able to distinguish it from other members of the campestris group without a microscope; its spores
thick; more or less equal above a tapered base; with a quickly collapsing whitish ring ; whitish; bald or finely fibrillose. flesh: whitish; not changing when sliced. odor and taste : not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh negative on cap surface. spore print : dark brown. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/agaricus_porphyrocephalus_pallidus.html
basis of dna sequencing and morphological differences. like agaricus abruptibulbus, agaricus reducibulbus is a white, almond-scented, woodland species. however, agaricus reducibulbus remains white as it develops (agaricus abruptibulbus becomes a little yellowish in old age), and it features smaller spores
base when rubbed; basal mycelium white. flesh: white; unchanging when sliced; sometimes yellow in stem base. odor and taste : reminiscent of almonds. dried specimens: cap and stem dull orangish yellow. chemical reactions : koh yellow on cap surface. spore print : dark brown. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/agaricus_reducibulbus.html