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wild fungi
Autumn foraging finds Poison Puffball amongst leaf litter
Morchella esculenta mushroom in green grass
Close-up of a turkey tail mushroom growing on the floor of a woodland in Minnesota, USA.
Close-up of a wild mushroom in a grassy field with soft focus background.
Montseny mushrooms
Lactarius torminosus fungus. The fungus has a funnel-shaped hat with dark circles. In the background, autumn leaves and grass
Amanita pantherina (DC. ex Fr.) Secr. Panthercap Amanite panthère, Pantherpilz, Párducgaloca. Cap 6–10cm across, ochraceous brown, covered with small pure-white warty fragments of the veil, finely striate at the margin. Stem 90–130´10–15mm, white with tattered, pendulous ring which is not striate or grooved, the stem base is bulbous and closely wrapped in the white volva which forms a distinct free rim around the base and one or two belt-like rings just above. Flesh white, becoming hollow in the stem. Taste and smell mild. Gills free, crowded white. Spore print white. Spores broadly ovate, nonamyloid, 8–12 x 6.7–7.5µ. Habitat in coniferous or deciduous woodland especially beech. Season summer to autumn. Uncommon. Poisonous – may be deadly. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).
Closeup of Shaggy ink cap mushrooms growing in rural Estonia, Northern Europe
One toadstool growing in grass on an Autumn morning in rural south west Scotland
Dryad's Saddle (pheasant's Back) Growing in Woods By Chungies Organic Farms - growing on a broken and dying tree stump in swampy area of woods. By morel mushrooms
mushroom on the forest floor
True morel (Morchella deliciosa) mushroom in spring forest
Autumn in pre-Pyrenees, Catalonian undergrowth.. during autumn season.\n\nLepiota
Mushroom Paxillus involutus, commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax  in forest in the ground
Lactarius rufus (Scop. ex Fr.) Fr. Rufous Milkcap, Lactaire roux, Fuchsfarbener Milchling, Rõt tejelõgomba, rõt keserûgomba, Lattario fulvo, Rossige melkzwam. Cap 3–10cm across, convex, later flattening, finally with a central depression, the centre usually with a pointed umbo, red-brown, bay or dark brick, moderately thick-fleshed, breaking fairly easily, surface dry and matt, margin somewhat inrolled at first. Stem 40–80 x 5–20mm, concolorous with cap but paler. Flesh white, stem often hollow when old. Gills somewhat decurrent, brittle, yellowish at first, later as cap but paler. Milk white; taste mild then after about a minute very hot and acrid. Spore print creamy whitish (B) with slight salmon tinge. Spores elliptic, warts occasionally isolated but mainly connected by thin ridges to form a rather incomplete network, 8–9.5 x 6.5–7.5µ. Habitat under pine. Season late spring to late autumn. Very common. Not edible although in some areas used as a seasoning after special treatment. (Never eat any mushroom until you are certain it is edible as many are poisonous and some are deadly poisonous.) Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis is a common Species under Pines in the Netherlands.
Poisonous Amanita Virosa mushroom growing in mossy forest. Dangerous toadstool.
White mushroom in fall on forest floor, Connecticut. Classic composition.
Mushrooms growing along a hiking trail in Ontario.
White Mushrooms in the Green Grass
White, Brown, Red, Orange, Yellow Mushrooms in Forest
A single mushroom growing on the forest floor.
Close-up picture of a Amanita poisonous mushroom in nature.
Clitocybe nebularis (Batsch. ex Fr.) Kummer, Clouded Funnel or Clouded Agaric Nebelkappe Clitocybe nebuleux Cap 5-20cm across, convex at first becoming flattened or occasionally slightly depressed in the centre, the margin remaining inrolled, cloudy grey sometimes tinged with buff, darker at the centre and often covered with a white bloom. Stem 50-100 x 15-25mm, swollen towards the base, paler than the cap, fibrous and easily broken. Flesh thick, white, becoming hollow in the stem. Smell strong and sweetish. Gills decurrent, crowded, whitish later with a yellow flush. Spore print cream. \nHabitat in deciduous or coniferous woods often in rings or troops. Season late summer to late autumn. Common. Said to be edible but known to cause gastric upsets in many people. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThe Species is quite common in late Autumn in the Netherlands and forms regularly Fairy Rings.
Macro  - Forest - Europe, Romania
Lactarius zonarius is a member of the large milk-cap genus Lactarius in the order Russulales,\n\nSome say that is edible other unedible, in my opinion leave the mushrooms to the forest critters... you don't need them.
Small and curious European songbird Crested tit, Lophophanes cristatus standing on a huge Boletus mushroom during an autumn foliage in boreal forest of Estonia.
Honey mushrooms in the New England woods, September
Boletus edulis is edible mushroom. Boletus edulis edible mushroom in the forest. Healthy and delicates food.
Mushroom at Lake O'Hara in 1997. From old film stock.
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