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honey fungus (Armillaria mellea)
Fungi on Tree Trunk, Aquitaine in France
26 october 2022, Basse Yutz, Yutz, Thionville Portes de France, Moselle, Lorraine, Grand Est, France. In a clearing, dozens of Honey Mushrooms have grown around an old tree stump. Mushrooms are yellow ocher in color. They seem to form a heap.
Armillaria mellea (Vahl. ex Fr.) Kummer syn. Clitocybe mellea (Vahl. ex Fr.) Ricken Hallimasch, Armillaire couleur de miel, Tête de meduse, Honey Fungus or Boot-lace Fungus Cap 3–12cm across, very variable, convex then flattened and centrally depressed or wavy, yellow ochre, tawny, to dark brown, often with an olivaceous tinge, covered in darker fibrillose scales especially at the centre. Stem 60–150×5–15mm, often tapering towards the base, yellowish becoming reddish-brown at the base, initially with a thick whitish to yellow cottony ring. Flesh white. Taste astringent, smell strong. Gills white at first then yellowish becoming pinkish-brown and often darker spotted with age. Spore print pale cream. \nHabitat in dense clusters on or around trunks or stumps of deciduous and coniferous trees and Hazel. Season summer to early winter. Very common. Edible when cooked but should only be eaten in small amounts as some forms are known to cause stomach upsets. Distribution, America and Europe.\nThe fungus spreads by long black cords called rhizomorphs resembling bootlaces which can be found beneath the bark of infected trees, on roots or in the soil where they can travel large distances to infect other trees. This is one of the most dangerous parasites of trees, causing an intensive white rot and ultimately death; there is no cure and the fungus is responsible for large losses of timber each year (source: R. Phillips).\n\nThis is a parasitic Mushroom. This is a very common Species in the Netherlands.\nThe young Fruit-bodies are edible.
Collection of little yellow mica-sparrow mushroom on a tree stump with moss
Armillaria mellea is a plant pathogen and a species of Honey fungus. It causes Armillaria root rot in many plant species. The mushrooms are edible but some people may be intolerant to them.
Mushroom
Autumn in the forest: Armillaria ostoyae mushroom growing on a birch tree bark.
Close-up of beautiful mushrooms in the sunshine in autumn, taken in Bavaria.
Forest in the countryside in late summer / early autumn
Armillaria ostoyae Honey Mushroom on a bark
Lentinus tigrinus is a mushroom in the Polyporaceae family. It is classified as nonpoisonous. It has been reported that mushrooms have significant antioxidant and antimicrobial activity.\nÖkologie:\nDer Getigerte Sägeblättling ist ein holzbewohnender Saprophyt, der Laubhölzer besiedelt, in Deutschland sind die wichtigsten Substrate Pappel und Weidenarten, daneben werden auch andere Laubhölzer besiedelt. Die vom Getigerten Sägeblättling besiedelten Hölzer befinden sich häufig dicht am Wasser oder liegen zum Teil im Wasser. Der Pilz besiedelt insbesondere verschiedene Auwaldtypen, er ist Wärme liebend und kommt besonders in klimatisch begünstigten Stromtälern vor. Außerhalb der Auwälder kann der Pilz in Parkanlagen, an Wegrändern und ähnlichen Standorten gefunden werden (source Wikipedia). \n\nThis Picture is made in a moist Area in Flevoland in April 2019. The Mushroom was growing on a Trunk of Populus.
Armillaria mellea
Group of little mushrooms an moss wooden floor. The image was captured during autum season in the canton of zurich.
Tokyo,Japan - September 5, 2021: Naratakemodoki or Armillariella tabescens growing in colonies in the rain
Mushrooms at green moss forest floor
Bunch of autumnal Honey Fungus grows over mossy stump
The forest in autumn - colorful
Close up of edible mushrooms growing on a tree. Honey agarics mushrooms
Armillaria mellea (Vahl. ex Fr.) Kummer syn. Clitocybe mellea (Vahl. ex Fr.) Ricken Hallimasch, Armillaire couleur de miel, Tête de meduse, Honey Fungus or Boot-lace Fungus Cap 3–12cm across, very variable, convex then flattened and centrally depressed or wavy, yellow ochre, tawny, to dark brown, often with an olivaceous tinge, covered in darker fibrillose scales especially at the centre. Stem 60–150×5–15mm, often tapering towards the base, yellowish becoming reddish-brown at the base, initially with a thick whitish to yellow cottony ring. Flesh white. Taste astringent, smell strong. Gills white at first then yellowish becoming pinkish-brown and often darker spotted with age. Spore print pale cream. \nHabitat in dense clusters on or around trunks or stumps of deciduous and coniferous trees and Hazel. Season summer to early winter. Very common. Edible when cooked but should only be eaten in small amounts as some forms are known to cause stomach upsets. Distribution, America and Europe.\nThe fungus spreads by long black cords called rhizomorphs resembling bootlaces which can be found beneath the bark of infected trees, on roots or in the soil where they can travel large distances to infect other trees. This is one of the most dangerous parasites of trees, causing an intensive white rot and ultimately death; there is no cure and the fungus is responsible for large losses of timber each year (source: R. Phillips).\n\nThis is a parasitic Mushroom. This is a very common Species in the Netherlands.\nThe young Fruit-bodies are edible.
Early autumn, a cluster of Japanese Ringless honey mushroom (Naratakemodoki, Armillaria tabescens) mushrooms grows at the foot of a wooded area (Nature close up macro photograph)
Close-up on a group of Armillaria mellea (honey fungus) in the woods.
Close up of small brown mushroom cluster on mossy forest floor.
Mature honey mushrooms growing in a tree stump on a Connecticut roadside in October, after rain
Mushrooms
Large clumps of fungus growing on a rotting log.
closeup of eatable mushrooms (honey agarics) growing at tree
This is a photograph taken on a mobile phone outdoors of wild mushrooms growing along the Hickory Creek Trail in Allegheny National Forest, Pennsylvania.
yellow cluster of honey fungi mushrooms growing on the side of the tree stump
Mushroom on tree trunk
Free Images: "bestof:Armillaria sp.jpg probably Armillaria borealis Taken in the Netherlands on a treestub Armillaria borealis 2005-11-05 own assumed Jensbn~commonswiki"
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