Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Red slug on mushroom (Arion rufus)
Other types of mushrooms have pores instead of gills. Like gills, pores produce spores, but they appear as small, sponge-like holes instead of thin blades. The little holes lead to tubes inside the cap. As spores mature, they eventually fall from the tubes out of holes and into their environment.
White flowers of Queen Anne's Lace also known as Cow Parsley, or Wild Chervil  scientific name Anthriscus lamprocarpus growing wild in Israel.
bunch of natural sponges
Linden flowers or lime tree flowers isolated on white background.
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.
Cep (Porcini Mushroom) growing in the autumn forest
Close up of a plant in the wild.
White poisonous mushroom, Ookinuhadatomayatake (straw fibrecap, Unconfirmed close up macro photography)
Mt.Takao, Tokyo, Japan (Oct-2022)
Heracleum  sosnowskyi growing in the woods on a sunny summer day in Norway in Bergen.
Common puffball (Lycoperdon perlatum)
Green and orange grass and weeds. Flat lay.
Autumn: Large growing Parasol mushroom in full length with a fruiting body.
Wild oyster mushrooms grow on logs, wild mushrooms grow on dead wood. Wild forest mushrooms are flat round
Low to medium, rather variable, rhizomatous, hairless perennial with fans of fleshy, sword-shaped leaves, basal often orange-tinged; stem leaves small and bract-like, the upper larger than the lower. Flowers greenish-yellow or orange-yellow, 10-16mmstarry, in a rather lax spike like raceme; filaments of stamens densely hairy. Fruit a small narrow, elliptical capsule, to 12mm long.\nHabitat: Bogs and wet acid heaths and moors, to 1200m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Throughout Europe, except the far north.\nGenerally regarded as poisonous, especially to livestock.\n\nThis Picture is made during a Vacation to Ireland in July 2022.
Multiple yellow flowers of evening primrose in June
Warted Oak Polypore Fungus, Also Know As Weeping Conk, Weeping Polypore, Oak Bracket, Inonotus Dryadeus
A photo of coral mushroom growing on the forest Floor.
High angle closeup view of Wild Carrot or Queen Anne’s Lace growing among grasses in the NSW countryside near Armidale
A blooming Biden laevis bush, aka bur-marigold, smooth beggar-ticks, in the blackwater national wildlife refuge
Dandelion fluff. The shapes created by nature are so beautiful and wonderful. Flower background material.
Macrolepiota procera (Scop. ex Fr.) Sing. syn. Lepiota procera (Scop. ex Fr.) S.F. Gray syn. Leucocoprinus procerus (Scop. ex Fr.) Pat. Lépiote élevée, Coulemelle, Riesenschirmpilz, Parasol. Cap 10–25cm across, button spherical or egg-shaped expanding flattened with a prominent umbo, pale buff or grey-brown covered in darker shaggy scales. Stem 150–300´8–15mm, 40mm at the bulb, white, with a grey-brown felty covering which becomes split into snake-like markings as the stem expands; ring large, double, white on upper surface, brown below, movable on the stem. Flesh thin, soft, white. Taste sweet, smell slight, indistinctive. Gills free, white. Spore print white. \nHabitat in open woods and pastures. Season summer and autumn. Uncommon. Edible – excellent. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).
Beetles, flies and other insects on yellow flowering goldenrod.
Parasol Mushroom on Autumn Mountain Meadow
Cozy autumn forest. Single young mushroom among herbs.  Background for decor, banner, illustration.
crops growing in a field
Common tansy,\nTanacetum vulgare summer yellow flowers closeup selective focus
Backlit Goatsbeard (Aruncus dioicus) flowers in a lush Michigan summer garden.
Free Images: "bestof:Panaeolina foenisecii spores 1.jpg Panaeolina foenisecii spores 1 Own 2007-06-13 Alan Rockefeller Panaeolina foenisecii Fungal spores"
mold-bacteria-fungus-fungal-spores-1482666.jpg
Panaeolina foenisecii spores 2.jpg
Panaeolina foenisecii spores 4.jpg
Panaeolina foenisecii spores 1.jpg
Panaeolina foenisecii spores 3.jpg
Panaeolina foenisecii gill.jpg
Psilocybe.stuntzii.spores.bg.jpg
Psilocybe.cyanescens.spores.bg.jpg
Gymnopilus luteofolius spores.jpg
Agrocybe pediades spores.jpg
Pluteus cervinus spores (1).jpg
Agaricus bisporus spores SEM 1.jpg
Agaricus bisporus spores SEM 2.jpg
Agaricus bisporus spores SEM 3.jpg
Spores tomato root.JPG
Hypholoma capnoides spores on top.jpg
Spore paprati.JPG
Spore mesh.JPG
Russula Atropurpurea.png
Nothoceros.jpg
Ptilidium pulcherrimum Sporen.JPG
Sporata fungo Lycoperdon perlatum.jpg
Glomus sieved soil.JPG
Enteridium lycoperdon.JPG
Cyathea smithii6.jpg
Trichoderma_aggressivum.jpeg
Chorioactis_spore.jpg
Weeping Mary – Lacrymaria lacrymabunda3.jpg
Bacillus subtilis endospore stain.png
Chain_of_conidia_of_a_Alternaria_sp._fungus_PHIL_3963_lores.jpg
Chain_of_conidia_of_a_Alternaria_sp._fungus_PHIL_3962_lores.jpg
Clamp.connections.in.mushroom.jpg
Two-celled teliospore of Gymnosporangium globosum.jpg
Selaginella heterospores.jpeg
Hypocrea_virens.jpg
Hypomyces_chrysospermus.jpg
Brachythecium rutabulum on Populus x canadensis.jpg
Terms of Use   Search of the Day