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Small mushroom in dramatic light, Mushroom Light Painting technique, wide angle closeup
The parasol mushroom (Macrolepiota procera, Lepiota procera) - edible mushroom. Culinary usage. Mushrooming.
A solitary garden mushroom with its visibly furry cap imbedded in grass with damp moss
Mushrooms under conifers in the Connecticut woods, possibly members of the genus Amanita, which contains some of the deadliest mushrooms, including the death cap and destroying angel
Morchella esculenta mushroom in green grass
Tokyo, Japan -August 1, 2024: A Conocybe apala or milky conecap in the wet grass
One toadstool growing in grass on an Autumn morning in rural south west Scotland
White, Brown, Red, Orange, Yellow Mushrooms in Forest
Autumn in pre-Pyrenees, Catalonian undergrowth.. during autumn season.
A common yellow russula mushroom (Russula ochroleuca) growing in Nesscliffe, Shropshire, England.
Toadstool near East Madison near White Mountain. These are toadstools growing on wet ground.
Leucocoprinus birnbaumii (Mushrooms)
A poisonous chlorophyllum molybdites parsol mushroom in a lush green lawn in Florida.
large gray edible mushroom
Russula aeruginea is a gregarious mushroom, usually occurring in small scattered groups.\nCap: Pale to very pale grass green, and becoming progressively paler towards margin, the cap of Russula aeruginea peels half way to the centre; convex, flattening only in the centre, sometimes with a slight depression; greasy when moist; margin sometimes faintly grooved; 4 to 9cm across; surface not cracked.\nGills: White, eventually turning yellow with age, the gills of the Green Brittlegill are adnexed and crowded.\nStem: White, more or less cylindrical, sometimes tapering at the base; 4 to 8cm long, 0.7 to 2cm in diameter.\nChemical tests : The flesh has a slow pink reaction to iron salts (FeSO4). : \nSpores:\nEllipsoidal, 6-10 x 5-7μm (excluding spines); ornamented with rounded warts up to 0.7μm tall which are joined by a few fine lines to form a partial network.\nSpore print: Cream\nOdour/taste:  Not distinctive.\nSeason: July to October in Britain and Ireland. \nHabitat: Often found on the edges of pine forests but nearly always under birches. In common with other members of the Russulaceae, Russula aeruginea is an ectomycorrhizal mushroom. \nDistribution: \nA fairly common find in The Netherlands, Britain and Ireland, the Green Brittlegill occurs throughout mainland Europe and is reported from many other parts of the world including North America.
Amanita gemmata. Yellow mushroom among the grass
Autumn in pre-Pyrenees, Catalonian undergrowth.. during autumn season.\n\nLepiota
Close-up picture of a Amanita poisonous mushroom in nature.
A Fly Agaric Mushroom (Amanita muscaria). in the forest in Scotland.
Mycena vitilis, commonly known as the snapping bonnet, is a species of inedible mushroom in the family Mycenaceae. It is found in Europe and North America, where it grows on the ground among leaves in damp places, especially under alder.
Amanita Rubescens (the Blusher)
japanese mushroom matsutake
Beautiful Toadstool in its natural environment, a deep lush humid forest in the Austrian Alps
Enchanting Explorations: The Captivating Realm of Mushrooms
Description:\nThe cap is convex to depressed and is coloured a distinctive bloody red, pink, crimson or purple. Sometimes it may show a yellowish or orange tinge in the centre. It may measure between 6 and 20 cm in diameter. The flesh is white with a mild taste and without scent; it quickly becomes soft and spongy and also greyish. The crowded gills are cream coloured when young, and become yellow with age. They are adnexed and are generally thin. Their edges may sometimes occur reddish. The amyloid, elli spores measure 8–10 by 7–10 μm are warty and are covered by an incomplete mesh. The stem is white, sometimes with a pink hue, slightly clubbed. It may measure 5 to 15 cm in height and up to 3 cm in diameter.\nDistribution, ecology and habitat:\nR. paludosa is mycorrhizal and occurs in coniferous woodlands and in peat bogs of Europe and North America; preferably under pine trees, where it forms mycorrhizae. Locally it can be very common.\nEdibility:\nThe mushroom is edible and is a common good in Finnish markets.\n\nThis Nice Russula was found in the Voorsterbos (Noordoostpolder), the Netherlands, near a Pine Tree in October 2022.
Meadow mushrooms
mushroom on the forest floor
russula solaris mushroom on the ground
white giant mushroom
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Amanita phalloides 2011 G2.jpg
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Suillus luteus 2010 G1.jpg
Lactarius deliciosus 2010 G1.jpg
Vinca minor 2016 G1.jpg
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Karsoy 2010 G1.jpg
Hieracium pilosella 2015 G1.jpg
Chelidonium majus 2016 G1.jpg
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Hortiboletus rubellus 2016 G1.jpg
Xerocomus chrysenteron 2009 G1.jpg
Erinaceus roumanicus 2013 G1.jpg
Lilac bouquet 2015 G1.jpg
Desenka meadow 2016 G1.jpg
Lucanus cervus male 2008 G1.jpg
Viscum album apple-tree 2011 G1.jpg
Tubifera ferruginosa 2010 G1.jpg
Lactarius quietus 2010 G1.jpg
Maykan MZ-11 2010 G1.jpg
Karsoy and Trud 2010 G1.jpg
Emys orbicularis 2009 G1.jpg
Forest road Slavne 2016 G1.jpg
Lycoperdon utriforme, Mosaic Puffball 2010 G1.jpg
Bufo bufo 2015 G1.jpg
Hemerocallis fulva 2016 G1.jpg
Bufo bufo 2009 G3.jpg
Bufo bufo 2009 G2.jpg
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Amanita muscaria mushroom.jpg
Fly amanita muscaria mushroom poisonous and psychoactive basidiomycete fungus.jpg
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Sunflower head 2015 G1.jpg
Gyroporus castaneus 2011 G1.jpg
Silene viscaria 2013 G1.jpg
Armillaria mellea 2014 G1.jpg
Yaremche Railway Station 2016 G1.jpg
Macrolepiota procera 2011 G1.jpg
MTZ-80 tractor 2011 G1.jpg
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Bouquet Ukraine 2005 G1.jpg
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Vinca minor 2011 G1.jpg
Xerocomus subtomentosus 2011 G1.jpg
Macrolepiota procera 2013 G1.jpg
Apples on tree 2011 G1.jpg
Natrix Natrix bog 2009 G1.jpg
Hemerocallis fulva 2009 G1.jpg
Maersk Riesa 2010 G1.jpg
Oryctes nasicornis male 2011 G1.jpg
Paris quadrifolia 2011 G1.jpg
MTZ-80 tractor 2011 G2.jpg
MTZ-80 tractor 2011 G3.jpg
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Horses closeup 2012 G1.jpg
Trolley bus TG-5 2013 G1.jpg
ZiL-130 truck 2013 G1.jpg
Edible fungi in basket 2015 G1.jpg
ZiL-130 truck 2015 G1.jpg
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Peas in pods 2016 G1.jpg
Domestic goat 2016 G1.jpg
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Kiev 57mm ZIS-2 2007 G1.jpg
Fomes fomentarius 2010 G1.jpg
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Cucurbita moschata Butternut 2012 G1.jpg
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St Voskresensky Vinn 2016 G1.jpg
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Red Clover 2011 G4.jpg
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Blackberry fruits 2008 G1.jpg
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