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Wild spring flowers
Yellow Forsythia
Large mound of bright golden yellow and green variegated foliage of Spindle Euonymus 'Emerald 'n' Gold'
Blooming groundsel
Close up of yellow cowslip flowers
Yellow Eranthis hyemalis - Winterling
Morchella esculenta mushroom in green grass
Larvae of these beetles are xylophagous. They mainly feed on downy oak (Quercus pubescens), evergreen oak (Quercus ilex) and cork oak (Quercus suber). These longhorn beetle are considered a pest of oaks\n\nThey are considered  a danger for Quercus Forests
white blossom of Prunus laurocerasus Otto Luyken shrub
Great Tit (Parus major) standing on a woodland branch in Winter eating a seed.
Yellow Coreopsis Daisies floers with blurred green background along a World Peace Pagoda garden in Nepal
Hymenogastraceae, Its most famous species is Hypholoma fasciculare. The hemispherical cap can reach 6 cm diameter. It is smooth and sulphur yellow with an orange-brown centre and whitish margin. The crowded gills are initially yellow but darken to a distinctive green colour as the blackish spores develop on the yellow flesh. It has a purple brown spore print. The stipe is up to 10 cm tall and 1 cm wide, light yellow, orange-brown below, often with an indistinct ring zone coloured dark by the spores. The taste is very bitter, though not bitter when cooked, but still poisonous.
A blooming forsythia bush in spring in the Salzkammergut, Austria, Europe
View of a mushroom on the soil in forest.
Yellow flowering moss Sedum Sexangulare Plants mats ornamental flowering moss ground cover plants
One toadstool growing in grass on an Autumn morning in rural south west Scotland
Dry petals of blooming plant in autumn
Witness a burst of spring colors in this enchanting image featuring a garden adorned with vibrant orange and yellow hyacinths. These captivating blooms command attention with their radiant hues. In the background, a blur of other blossoming flowers creates a dreamy backdrop, adding to the allure of the scene. Let the vibrant colors and the charm of nature's springtime symphony captivate your senses
A solitary garden mushroom with its visibly furry cap imbedded in grass with damp moss
Groundsel
Wonderfully flowering, yellow shrub plant Baptisia (false indigo)
White Mushrooms in the Green Grass
closeup of the bright yellow foliage of 'White Gold' bleeding heart. Lamprocapnos Dicentra spectabilis. High quality photo
Winter aconite, eranthis hyemalis flowering in a calcareous woodland habitat
Wild irises blooming in spring - selective focus, copy space
Lactarius pubescens, commonly known as the downy milk cap, is a species of fungus in the family Russulaceae. It is a medium to large agaric with a creamy-buff, hairy cap, whitish gills and short stout stem. The fungus has a cosmopolitan distribution, and grows solitarily or in scattered groups on sandy soil under or near birch. \nDescription:\nThe cap is 2.5–10 cm wide, obtuse to convex, becoming broadly convex with a depressed center. The margin (cap edge) is rolled inward and bearded with coarse white hairs when young. The cap surface is dry and fibrillose except for the center, which is sticky and smooth when fresh, azonate, white to cream, becoming reddish-orange to vinaceous (red wine-colored) on the disc with age. The gills are attached to slightly decurrent, crowded, seldom forked, whitish to pale yellow with pinkish tinges, slowly staining brownish ochraceous when bruised. The stem is 2–6.5 cm long, 6–13 mm thick, nearly equal or tapered downward, silky, becoming hollow with age, whitish when young, becoming ochraceous from the base up when older, apex usually tinged pinkish, often with a white basal mycelium. The flesh is firm, white; odor faintly like geraniums or sometimes pungent, taste acrid. The latex is white upon exposure, unchanging, not staining tissues, taste acrid. The spore print is cream with a pinkish tint. The edibility of Lactarius pubescens has been described as unknown, poisonous, and even edible.\nEdibility: Ambiguous and controversial. In Russia is consumed after prolonged boiling followed by a marinating process. However it is reported to have caused gastro-intestinal upsets. Therefore, its consumption should not be recommended and this species considered toxic (source Wikipedia).
Close up of white echium flowers in bloom
Blue Tit in habitat
A solitary horse mushroom, \tAgaricus arvensis, sitting in the middle of luscious green grass
Amanita Rubescens (the Blusher)
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