Spores used for sowing

Spores used for sowing

Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
confusing, and their taxonomy has not yet been completely established. the principal (mushroom) players in this drama are fairly easily recognized by their yellow gills, their large, white, sacklike volvas , and their bright orange or orange red caps, which have lined margins. heading up the cast (for
and fall; widely distributed east of the great plains, from québec to hidalgo. cap: - cm; oval at first, becoming convex, typically with a central bump; sticky when fresh; brilliant red or orange, fading to orange, or yellow on the margin; bald; typically without warts or patches ; the margin lined for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita_jacksonii.html
although this species has no official name, it was apparently on mycological giant alexander smith's "to-do" list; in a never published manuscript smith planned to honor new mexico's legendary amateur mycologist, chuck barrows, who knew the unnamed amanita well and sent several collections to smith for
study. thanks to the herbarium of the field museum of natural history for facilitating my study of the collection cited and described below. description: ecology: mycorrhizal with quaking aspen ; growing alone, scattered, or gregariously; july and august; colorado and new mexico. cap: - cm across; bell-shaped...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/amanita_sp_05.html
in physical features cantharellus coccolobae is similar to the well-known species cantharellus cinnabarinus , since it has small, pinkish orange fruiting bodies. however, cantharellus cinnabarinus is a denizen of temperate hardwood forests, and it differs microscopically. thanks to rita olschewski for
documenting, collecting, and preserving cantharellus coccolobae for study; her collection is deposited in the herbarium of michael kuo . description: ecology: mycorrhizal with sea grapes (plants in the genus coccoloba); growing alone, scattered, or gregariously in sandy, coastal areas; august and september...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cantharellus_coccolobae.html
clavariaceae > clavaria . . . ] by michael kuo this little fungus is rarely encountered, to judge from collections records at north america's major herbaria. it is a skinny, whitish club fungus found under hardwoods in eastern north america, hardly noticeable unless you are really scouring the forest floor for
specimens—and i have just discovered that dried specimens, rehydrated after four years in my herbarium, have filled my lab with garlic odor. clavaria fuscata is originally a european species; whether or not our north american version is actually the same is unclear. george atkinson ( ) named clavaria foetida for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/clavaria_fuscata.html
mushroomexpert.com) major groups > gilled mushrooms > pale-spored > collybioid > tricholomopsis decora tricholomopsis decora [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > tricholomataceae > tricholomopsis . . . ] by michael kuo there may be several north american species going under the european name "tricholomopsis decora," but for
scales. gills: attached to the stem; close or crowded; yellow. stem: - cm long; - cm thick; more or less equal; hollow; pale yellow; bald. flesh: yellow to pale yellow. odor and taste : not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh pink to red on cap surface. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/tricholomopsis_decora.html
easily recognized by its shaggy to hairy exterior and its prominently grooved interior—or at least these features will serve to identify it in temperate north america. in tropical and subtropical areas, several confusingly similar species can be found; see the key to bird's nest fungi in north america for
brown, shaggy to woolly, with tufts of hairs; inner surface distinctly grooved or lined (otherwise bald) and shiny; "lid" typically white, disappearing with maturity. eggs: to mm wide; ellipsoid, or often roughly triangular; sheathed; attached to the nest by cords (funiculi). microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cyathus_striatus.html
gyromitra californica (mushroomexpert.com) major groups > false morels > gyromitra californica gyromitra californica [ ascomycetes > pezizales > discinaceae > gyromitra . . . ] by michael kuo thanks to mike wood of the wonderful web site mykoweb ( ) for sharing his gorgeous photo of gyromitra californica
the terrestrial growth habit, cushion-shaped cap, and ribbed stem with a pink base distinguish gyromitra californica from all other species of gyromitra but gyromitra sphaerospora, which is virtually identical but grows directly from wood most of the time, and features round (rather than ellipsoid) spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/gyromitra_californica.html
northern and montane areas of the continent. it can be distinguished from other species of gyromitra by its convoluted and brainlike, reddish brown cap, and by the fact that its stem is not massive in proportion to its cap. in dry weather conditions, gyromitra esculenta can blacken and dry up--and last for
to stem, tan to whitish, finely mealy. flesh: thin; brittle; whitish to tan; slight or chambered. stem: - cm long; - cm thick; pale yellowish tan to rose to tinged like the cap; usually roundish in cross-section but frequently folded into a figure eight cross-section; bald. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/gyromitra_esculenta.html
different shapes in the course of its development. at first it looks rather floppy, with a curled up margin--but by maturity it has acquired a saddle-shaped or three-lobed appearance, usually with a fairly deep cleft or "sinus." crucial identifying features include the cap shape (or shapes, if we account for
with the stem where contact occurs. stem: - cm long (sometimes up to cm long); - mm thick; more or less equal; bald or somewhat fuzzy; hollow; whitish to pale brownish; basal mycelium white. flesh: thin; brittle; whitish. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/helvella_latispora.html
the species is so infrequently collected it is unclear whether it might be expected elsewhere. helvella atra is a similar species; it features a cap margin that is not usually rolled up, and an undersurface that is smooth or merely finely fuzzy. thanks to the herbarium of the university of michigan for
; the margin rolled upwards when young and often remaining upturned at maturity; undersurface densely fuzzy or hairy, grayish, often ingrown with the stem where contact occurs. flesh: thin; brittle. stem: - cm long; to cm thick; colored like the cap; smooth or finely fuzzy. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/helvella_pezizoides.html