Spores used for sowing

Spores used for sowing

Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
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cabbage - wikipedia cabbage from wikipedia, the free encyclopedia jump to navigation jump to search leafy vegetable in the flowering plant family brassicaceae this article is about the vegetable. for other uses, see cabbage (disambiguation) . cabbage a whole white cabbage and a cross section species
eating; they can be pickled , fermented (for dishes such as sauerkraut ), steamed , stewed , sautéed , braised , or eaten raw . cabbage is a good source of vitamin k , vitamin c and dietary fiber . world production of cabbage and other brassicas for was million tonnes , with china accounting for %...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabbage
limited to the conifer forests of northern and montane areas. it tends to grow in clusters, and is often found fruiting from well-decayed wood. stropharia depilata, psilocybe hornemannii, and naematoloma hornemannii are synonyms. thanks to the sam mitchel herbarium of fungi at the denver botanic gardens for
facilitating my study of the stropharia hornemannii collections cited and described below, and for permission to reproduce the collectors' photos. description: ecology: saprobic ; growing alone, scattered, or in clusters on duff and woody debris in boreal and montane forests; often found fruiting from...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/stropharia_hornemannii.html
dark-spored > coprinoid mushrooms > coprinopsis atramentaria coprinopsis atramentaria [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > psathyrellaceae > coprinopsis . . . ] by michael kuo like other coprinoid mushrooms , coprinopsis atramentaria has gills that turn black and eventually liquefy, creating an "ink." in fact, for
level of species, as coprinus acuminatus. the scaly-capped coprinopsis atramentaria var. squamosa is recognized by most authors as a separate species, coprinopsis romagnesiana (which i suspect is also synonymous with van de bogart's var. crassivelata). see van de bogart's key to the species cluster for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/coprinopsis_atramentaria.html
basidiomycetes > agaricales > cortinariaceae > cortinarius ... ] by michael kuo the fiery orange base of this hardwood-loving cortinarius is quite distinctive, separating it from the hordes of dull, boring members of subgenus telamonia. like other telamonias it is "hygrophanous"--the term in mycologese for
to dry out and change color markedly. when young the cap has purple shades that create an appealing contrast to the orange stem base--but by maturity it becomes more or less dingy cinnamon brown. cortinarius bulliardii is a similar european species. below i have cited kauffman ( ) as the authority for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/cortinarius_rubripes.html
fairly well developed wrinkles and folds on the under/outer surface, near the cap margin. it is also a bit more substantial than craterellus fallax, and it tends to grow in clusters of two to four mushrooms, while craterellus fallax only clusters rarely. field guides emphasize a sickeningly sweet odor for
conditions, but typically pale to dark watery gray (sometimes nearly white); finely, radially scaly with blackish appressed fibers and scales; the margin often blackening at maturity. under/outer surface: bald toward the base, but veined or prominently wrinkled with gill-like folds and cross-veins for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/craterellus_foetidus.html
over the nest (in young specimens), covering the eggs; and the tiny cords that attach the eggs to the nest. observing this last feature requires some patience with a very tiny tool--say, a needle or a pin--and a hand lens. the cord, which is called a "funiculus" in mycologese, is the egg's mechanism for
projected out of the cup. as this happens, the cord is stretched to its limit--then breaks away from the nest, remaining attached to the egg. where the cord was attached to the nest, it becomes frayed, since it was torn away. the little frayed ends are adhesive, and when they come into contact with, for...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/crucibulum_laeve.html
major groups > gilled mushrooms > dark-spored > inocybe > inocybe adaequata inocybe adaequata [ basidiomycetes > agaricales > cortinariaceae > inocybe . . . ] by michael kuo as i am treating it, inocybe adaequata is a reddish brown to wine-colored species characterized by its hairy cap, its large size (for
an inocybe ), the absence of cystidia on the gill faces, and more or less elliptical spores that lack spines or nodules. as with almost all species of inocybe, a microscope is required for positive identification. several field guides treat a mushroom matching this description as "inocybe jurana," but...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/inocybe_adaequata.html