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Close up of wild mushrooms
Coprinus comatus, the shaggy ink cap, lawyer's wig, or shaggy mane, is a common fungus often seen growing on lawns, along gravel roads and waste areas.
Many large and small porcini mushrooms were collected in the autumn forest.
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Brown cap champignons and mushrooms slices isolated on white background. Close-up.
White mushroom growing amidst dry grass and leaves on the ground
View of a group of mushrooms on the grass.
Mushrooms grow among the grass and dry leaves.
Autumn foraging finds Poison Puffball amongst leaf litter
Fresh mushroom in green forests as seem during the mushroom season.
Tricholoma sulphureum (Bull. ex Fr.) Kummer syn. T. bufonium (Pers. ex Fr.) Gillet. Tricolome soufré, Schwefelritterling, Büdös pereszke, Agarico zolfino, Narcisridderzwam, Sulphur Knight Gas Agaric. Cap 3–8cm across, convex with an indistinct umbo, sulphur-yellow often tinged reddish-brown or olivaceous. Stem 25–40 x 6–10mm, sulphur-yellow covered in reddish-brown fibres. Flesh bright sulphur-yellow. Taste mealy, smell strongly of gas-tar. Gills bright sulphur-yellow. Spore print white. Spores 9–12 x 5–6um. Habitat in deciduous woods, less frequently with conifers. Season autumn. Occasional. Not edible. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis a quite common species in the Dutch Deciduous Forests with Oak.
Coprinus comatus
Shiitake Mushroom on White Background
Fresh champignons close up isolated on white background
View of a mushroom on the soil in in pine forest.
Close up of large fresh champignons (button mushrooms) on smooth reflective surface. Isolated on white background
Fresh Chestnut Mushrooms on White background
a group of young crested thistle growing on a meadow. Hidden between grass. Nature photo from the forest
Baby bella mushrooms isolated on white background.
Shiitake - edible asian mushrooms isolated on white background. File contains clipping paths.
location: North America, Europe\nedibility: Inedible\nfungus colour: Brown, Grey to beige\nnormal size: Less than 5cm\ncap type: Other\nstem type: Lateral, rudimentary or absent\nflesh: Flesh granular or brittle\nspore colour: Light to dark brown\nhabitat: Grows in woods, Grows on the ground, Found in fields, lawns or on roadsides \n \n\nLycoperdon foetidum Bon. syn. L. perlatum var. nigrescens Pers. syn. L. nigrescens (Pers.) Lloyd Stinkender Stäubling. Fruit body 1–4cm across, 1.5–3cm high, subglobose pinched into a short tapered base, outer layer of groups of fine pointed blackish-brown spines convergent at their tips but gradually wearing off leaving a net-like pattern on the light greyish-tan inner wall which is smooth and papery, opening by a central pore. Gleba eventually sepia; sterile base, spongy, well developed, occupying up to one-half of the volume of the fruit body. Spores globose, finely spiny, 4–5um in diameter. Habitat on heaths or in coniferous or mixed woodland. Also on clay soils. Season summer to autumn. Frequent. Edibility unknown -avoid. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).
Set of Royal Brown champignons isolated on a white background
Mushrooms bred in the soil
Poisonous mushroom in the ground in the forest in autumn.
Autumn in pre-Pyrenees, Catalonian undergrowth.. during autumn season.
Fresh white champignons, whole, background, full frame
Shaggy ink cap or Lawyer's wig (Coprinus comatus) fungus in a forest
Fresh champignon mushrooms isolated on white.
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).
Free Images: "bestof:Agaricus ovatus — Flora Batava — Volume v11.jpg la Coprinus comatus O F Müll Pers Agaricus ovatus Schaeff atramentarius Linn mushroom Coprinus comatus"
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