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Food, Edible Mushroom, Chanterelle, Raw Food, Vegetable
An array of fungi, wild mushrooms, Clitocybe Phyllophila, seemingly dancing in the autumn breeze with the backdrop of the bark of an English apple tree
Cep (Porcini Mushroom) growing in the autumn forest
Geastrum triplex is a fungus found in the detritus and leaf litter of hardwood forests around the world. It is commonly known as the collared earthstar, the saucered earthstar, or the triple earthstar
Galerina marginata mushroom
common inkcap mushroom growing wild in the New Forest, Hampshire, England
inedible wild mushrooms
Fly agaric red (Amanita muscaria) on the forest ground in autumn
Candy cap mushroom, a species of Milk-caps , growing through the leaf mould of a forest floor in the Dordogne region of France
Toadstool in close up
A Parasol Mushroom on moorland in Cornwall in early autumn
Days of rain, in Alaska, have cause an invasion of mushrooms. A natural process in decay, these mushrooms offer an amazing example of natural beauty.
Fly agaric is the fairy tale mushroom with bright red and white dots
Fomitopsis pinicola (Swartz ex Fr.) Karsten. Fichtenporling Unguline marginee. Fruit body perennial; no stem. Up to 38cm across, 20cm wide, 15cm thick, convex to hoof-shaped, with a thickened, rounded margin; upper surface with a sticky reddish-brown resinous crust, then grayish to brown or black; hard, woody, smooth or glossy-looking. Tubes up to 6mm deep per season; cream to buff. Pores 5-6 per mm, circular; surface cream-colored. Flesh up to 12cm thick, corky, hard, woody; cream to buff, sometimes zoned. Spores cylindrical ellipsoid, smooth, 6-9 x 3.5-4.5µ. Deposit whitish. Hyphal structure trimitic; clamps present. Habitat on dead conifer stumps and logs and occasionally on living trees. Found throughout Europe and most of North America except the South from Texas eastward. Season all year. Not edible. Comment The most commonly collected polypore in North America. The cap colors are rather variable (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis beautiful Species is nowadays quite common in the Netherlands and growing on different Trees.
A symbol of beauty and danger
Fly agaric mushroom in the forest
Wild Mushroom, Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, Segovia, Castile Leon, Spain, Europe
Some Alice In Wonderland type of storybook mushrooms dominate an area of a northwestern Switzerland forest.
Chanterelle mushrooms in a forest on green background. Edible mushrooms. Summer time
Mushrooms growing in a forest.
Fungus from the Boletaceae family, known as sponge mushrooms, in El Chico National Park.
Russula krombholtzii Shaffer syn. Russula atropurpurea (Krombh.) Britz. non Pk. Feketésvörös galambgomba Blackish-red Russula. Cap 4-10cm across, convex then flattened with slight depression; dark blackish purple at center, paler, more blood red at margin, often mottled with paler, discolored areas; smooth, slightly viscid when wet. Gills adnexed, crowded; palish cream. Stem 30-60 x 10-20mm, fairly firm, later softer and easily broken; white, often becoming grayish with age. Flesh white. Odor rather fruity, of apples. Taste from almost mild to rather hot. Spores ovoid, 7-9 x 6-7µ; with warts joined by fine ridges to form a well-developed but not quite complete network. Deposit whitish (A-B). Cap cystidia abundant, cylindrical to somewhat club-shaped, without septa. Habitat usually under oak or other deciduous trees. Common. Found widely throughout northeastern North America, west to Michigan. Season June-October. Not edible. (Never eat any mushroom until you are certain it is edible as many are poisonous and some are deadly poisonous.) (source R. Phillips).
White poisonous mushroom, Ookinuhadatomayatake (straw fibrecap, Unconfirmed close up macro photography)
Birch bolete (Leccinum scabrum), fused with each other mushrooms in the wild
big boletus edulis isolated on white background close up
Autumn mashrooms
close-up of a fly agaric with spores dripping from it
A tiny acorn on the forest floor swaddled in the cap of another acorn. It has a baby Jesus feel to it.
Group of mushrooms growing in a vegetable garden.
Phallus impudicus Pers. syn. Ithyphallus impudicus (L.) Fr. Gemeine Stinkmorchel Phallus Impudique, Satyre puant, Oeuf du diable, Stinkhorn. Fruit body initially semi-submerged and covered by leaf-litter, egg-like, 3–6cm across, attached to substrate by a cord-like mycelial strand. The outer wall of the egg is white to pinkish but there is a thick gelatinous middle layer held between the membranous inner and outer layers. The egg is soon ruptured, as the white hollow stalk-like receptacle extends to 10–25cm high, the pendulous, bell-shaped head is covered by a meshwork of raised ribs covered in dark olive slime which contains the spores. This slime has a strong sickly offensive smell which attracts flies from large distances, the slime sticks to the legs of the flies and thus acts as a means of spore dispersal which takes place very rapidly, exposing the underlying mesh of the cap. Spores pale yellow.
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