Spores used for sowing

Spores used for sowing

Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
stem; distant; pinkish flesh colored. stem: - mm long; up to about mm thick; more or less equal; bald; often longitudinally lined; colored like the cap; with whitish basal mycelium . flesh: insubstantial; orangish brown. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores
(saccardo, ; mueller, ; osmundson et al., ; miller & miller, .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores basidium pileipellis © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , december). laccaria pumila. retrieved from the mushroomexpert.com...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/laccaria_pumila.html
cm long; - mm thick; fragile; equal; bald; sticky; colored like the cap or paler. flesh: insubstantial; yellowish. odor and taste : odor slightly to moderately mealy or slightly of iodine; taste similar. spore print : white. chemical reactions : koh negative on cap surface. microscopic features : spores
basidia usually -spored. cheilocystidia abundant; clavate to subglobose or occasionally saccate; covered with numerous rod-like projections. pleurocystidia absent. pileipellis an ixocutis. references : smith, . herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/mycena_epipterygia_lignicola.html
black bruising reactions of the cap and underside. steccherinum adustum is a former name. bjerkandera adusta is not a synonym, but a different mushroom with minute pores rather than teeth. mycorrhaphium adustulum differs in its smaller cap size ( - cm across) and elliptical, rather than cylindrical, spores
groups; white at first, becoming pinkish to purplish, then dark brown and eventually black from the margin inward; bruising black. stem: often absent; when present - x - cm; central or lateral; whitish; velvety. flesh: white; tough; unchanging when sliced. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/mycorrhaphium_adustum.html
maturity; close; whitish to grayish or brownish when young, but soon developing black areas and acquiring a mottled appearance; eventually black overall. stem: - cm long; up to cm thick; equal above a slightly enlarged base; smooth or powdery; whitish; with a high, thin ring that becomes blackened by spores
and often disappears. flesh: whitish; soft. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : black or blackish. microscopic features : spores - x - μ; smooth; more or less elliptical; often with a pore; dark brown in koh. pleurocystidia irregularly clavate, with refractive contents. cheilocystidia absent...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/panaeolus_semiovatus.html
center); - cm wide; upper surface at first whitish, darkening to yellowish brown or pale brown, smooth or wrinkled; under surface paler brown or whitish, finely mealy; flesh pale, sometimes bruising slowly yellowish; odor not distinctive; often surrounded by whitish mycelium . microscopic features : spores
(saccardo, ; seaver, ; breitenbach & kränzlin, ; arora, ; phillips, / ; horn, kay & abel, ; barron, ; mcneil, .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. asci, paraphyses, and spores © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , february). peziza...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/peziza_domiciliana.html
impudicus it is often found in lawns, gardens, and cultivated areas, though it also grows in woods. it develops from an underground "egg," and when mature it is covered with a foul-smelling brown or olive brown slime which attracts flies and other insects (who then, in turn, disperse the mushroom's spores
brown to dark brown slime; developing a small hole with a white rim at the tip of the cap; with a whitish to yellowish or pinkish hollow stem, - cm thick; usually with a white or pink volva clinging to the stem and around the base; the base attached to whitish rhizomorphs . microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/phallus_ravenelii.html
(rarely up to or cm across); upper surface scarlet red, fading with age, bald; undersurface whitish (but the red color of the upper surface often shows through), bald; stem - cm, colored like and continuous with the undersurface, base with hairy white mycelium ; flesh thin. microscopic features : spores
(seaver, ; kanouse, ; smith, smith & weber, ; weber & smith, ; arora, ; harrington, ; phillips, / ; lincoff, ; horn, kay & abel, ; barron, ; roody, ; baral, ; mcneil, .) herb. kuo , , ; ; , , , . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores © mushroomexpert.com...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/sarcoscypha_occidentalis.html
distributed in north america. fruiting body: - mm across; disc-shaped to cup-shaped or goblet-shaped; gelatinous; upper surface purple and bald; undersurface similar to upper surface, or paler and finely fuzzy; with or without a poorly defined stem-like structure; odorless. microscopic features : spores
(saccardo, ; seaver, ["coryne urnalis"]; dennis, ; breitenbach & kränzlin, ; phillips, / ; barron, ; baral, ; mcneil, .) herb. kuo , , . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores asci in melzer's reagent © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( ,...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/ascocoryne_cylichnium.html
darkening to brownish red with age; smooth, but the margin frequently adorned with felty patches or fibers from the partial veil . gills: running down the stem; distant or nearly so; often forking; pale orangish to yellowish at first, developing olive shades and finally turning olive-black as the spores
fairly smooth above the ring zone , but prominently scaly to hairy with reddish to purplish red fibers below; orangish underneath the scales and zones of fibers. flesh: orangish; often yellow in the stem. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : greenish to olive black. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/chroogomphus_pseudovinicolor.html
mushrooms are cylindrical, and do not usually branch. they are so brittle and fragile that picking them is quite a challenge. other similar club mushrooms are differently colored, though one look-alike has been separated on microscopic features: clavaria atkinsoniana is a very similar species with larger spores
white or translucent; often curved; usually with a somewhat pointed tip that discolors yellowish or pale brownish. flesh: white; thin. odor and taste : not distinctive. spore print : white. chemical reactions : irons salts negative on all surfaces. koh negative on all surfaces. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/clavaria_vermicularis.html