Spores used for sowing

Spores used for sowing

Search Results for: Spores used for sowing
spruce-fir elevations of the central and southern rocky mountains, floccularia fusca is recognized by its grayish brown cap, which features a zone of white partial veil remnants along the edge; its white spore print and gills; its stem, which is sheathed in whitish shagginess; and its smooth, amyloid spores
; sometimes with a poorly defined ring ; often developing yellowish discolorations in the basal half. flesh: white; not changing on exposure. taste : not distinctive; odor not distinctive. spore print : white. chemical reactions : koh and iron salts on cap surface negative. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/floccularia_fusca.html
golden orange. pore surface: bright golden orange; not bruising; with – angular pores per mm; tubes to – mm deep. stem: absent. flesh: thick; zoned with zones of golden orange, pastel orange, and brownish; fairly soft. chemical reactions : koh instantly dark purple on all parts. microscopic features : spores
(overholts, ; gilbertson & ryvarden, ; justo et al., .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. koh spores © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , november). hapalopilus croceus. retrieved from the mushroomexpert.com web site:...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hapalopilus_croceus.html
dry; bald when young but soon fibrillose; often twisted; often becoming grooved or split lengthwise; pale yellow to orange, with a whitish base. flesh: yellowish; thin. odor and taste : not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh negative on cap surface. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores
(saccardo, ; smith, ; hesler and smith, ; smith, smith & weber, ; largent, ; arora, ; barron, ; boertmann, ; lodge et al., ; kuo & methven, .) herb. kuo , . this website contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , june...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/hygrocybe_acutoconica.html
the great plains. its odor is pleasant, rather than one of the typical inocybe odors (spermatic, like green corn, and so on). the stem does not bruise blue, which helps to separate inocybe calospora from inocybe calamistrata--but you will need to use a microscope to identify it with certainty; the spores
reddish brown (sometimes whitish or dark brown); fairly tough; basal mycelium white. flesh: yellowish to brownish; insubstantial. odor : slightly sweet and fragrant, or not distinctive. chemical reactions : koh on cap surface negative to slightly pinkish. spore print : brown. microscopic features : spores...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/inocybe_calospora.html
sometimes spotted or pitted; becoming hollow. flesh: whitish to pink; staining red, and eventually green. milk: deep red; scanty. odor and taste : odor not distinctive; taste mild to faintly peppery. chemical reactions : koh negative on cap surface. spore print : pale cream. microscopic features : spores
(saccardo, ; coker, ; kauffman, ; hesler & smith, ; smith, smith & weber, ; phillips, / ; lincoff, ; barron, ; roody, ; mcneil, ; nuytinck et al., .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores pileipellis © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as:...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lactarius_subpurpureus.html
flesh: buff white, turning quickly yellow when sliced. milk: white, turning yellow on exposure to air; staining tissues yellow. odor and taste : odor not distinctive; taste mild or slightly acrid. spore print : white to yellowish. chemical reactions : koh yellow on cap surface. microscopic features : spores
(hesler & smith, ; methven, .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , may). lactarius substriatus. retrieved from the mushroomexpert.com web site:...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lactarius_substriatus.html
pale-spored > [ oysters ] > lentinellus the genus lentinellus [ basidiomycetes > russulales > auriscalpiaceae . . . ] by michael kuo the features that define the genus lentinellus include: gills that are serrated or jagged; growth on wood, usually in clusters; peppery or acrid taste ; and amyloid spores
that are finely spiny or warted--though the spores in some species can be so finely ornamented that they appear smooth unless you have a very good microscope. many species of lentinellus lack stems, but some have rudimentary, lateral, or even central and well developed stems. lentinellus is a well studied...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lentinellus.html
rusty brown scales and hairs; with a folded-over ring zone at the top of the sheath. flesh: white; unchanging when sliced. odor and taste : odor not distinctive; taste not distinctive, or bitter. chemical reactions : koh negative to slowly pinkish on cap. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores
(smith & walters, ; bessette, miller, bessette & miller, ; miller, volk & bessette, ; roody, ; vellinga, ; miller & miller, ; harmaja, .) herb. kuo . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , september)....
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/leucopholiota_decorosa.html
developing a small, soft, protruding spine in the center; surface elsewhere whitish to pale tan; skin thin; flesh white and soft at first, then turning brownish and eventually turning into brown spore dust; flesh in sterile base white becoming brownish; odor not distinctive. microscopic features : spores
(zeller & smith, ; smith, ; smith, smith & weber, ; arora, ; kreisel, ; bates, ; jarvis, ; desjardin, wood & stevens, .) herb. kuo . herb dbg rmnp - , - . this website contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. spores © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , february...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lycoperdon_subcretaceum.html
nearly distant; pale to yellowish or tinged pinkish. stem: - cm long; - mm thick; equal; hollow; smooth or with tiny hairs; colored like the cap above, paler below. flesh: insubstantial; pallid or yellowish. odor and taste : odor not distinctive; taste mild. spore print : white. microscopic features : spores
(saccardo, ; smith, ; phillips, / ; lincoff, ; horn, kay & abel, ; barron, .) herb. kuo , . this site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms. immature, amyloid spores cheilocystidia © mushroomexpert.com cite this page as: kuo, m. ( , december). mycena luteopallens. retrieved...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/mycena_luteopallens.html