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Forest mushrooms. Edible mushrooms in the forest litter. Mushrooms in the forest
Autumn foraging finds Poison Puffball amongst leaf litter
Close up of a red mushrooms
Full frame image of mushroom on moss with focus on foregroung in Bavaria in autumn, selective focus.
amanita muscaria, fly agaric or fly amanita basidiomycota muscimol mushroom with typical white spots on a red hat in a forest. Natural light, vibrant colors and selective focus.
Amanita mushrooms group
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
A view of a beautiful mushroom in the forest with green moss in nice light
Tricholoma sulphureum (Bull. ex Fr.) Kummer syn. T. bufonium (Pers. ex Fr.) Gillet. Tricolome soufré, Schwefelritterling, Büdös pereszke, Agarico zolfino, Narcisridderzwam, Sulphur Knight Gas Agaric. Cap 3–8cm across, convex with an indistinct umbo, sulphur-yellow often tinged reddish-brown or olivaceous. Stem 25–40 x 6–10mm, sulphur-yellow covered in reddish-brown fibres. Flesh bright sulphur-yellow. Taste mealy, smell strongly of gas-tar. Gills bright sulphur-yellow. Spore print white. Spores 9–12 x 5–6um. Habitat in deciduous woods, less frequently with conifers. Season autumn. Occasional. Not edible. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis a quite common species in the Dutch Deciduous Forests with Oak.
Boletus edulis growing in the forest among the cowberry bushes and berries on a sunny day.
mushroom on the forest floor
Suillus grevillei (commonly known as Grevilles bolete and larch bolete) is a mycorrhizal mushroom with a tight, brilliantly coloured cap, shiny and wet looking with its mucous slime layer. , an intresting photo
Amanita muscaria, group of different sizes and shapes.
Forest fly agaric in yellow foliage. Top view. The general plan.
View of a mushroom on the soil in in pine forest.
Fly agaric in the autumn forest.
Lactarius pubescens, commonly known as the downy milk cap, is a species of fungus in the family Russulaceae. It is a medium to large agaric with a creamy-buff, hairy cap, whitish gills and short stout stem. The fungus has a cosmopolitan distribution, and grows solitarily or in scattered groups on sandy soil under or near birch. \nDescription:\nThe cap is 2.5–10 cm wide, obtuse to convex, becoming broadly convex with a depressed center. The margin (cap edge) is rolled inward and bearded with coarse white hairs when young. The cap surface is dry and fibrillose except for the center, which is sticky and smooth when fresh, azonate, white to cream, becoming reddish-orange to vinaceous (red wine-colored) on the disc with age. The gills are attached to slightly decurrent, crowded, seldom forked, whitish to pale yellow with pinkish tinges, slowly staining brownish ochraceous when bruised. The stem is 2–6.5 cm long, 6–13 mm thick, nearly equal or tapered downward, silky, becoming hollow with age, whitish when young, becoming ochraceous from the base up when older, apex usually tinged pinkish, often with a white basal mycelium. The flesh is firm, white; odor faintly like geraniums or sometimes pungent, taste acrid. The latex is white upon exposure, unchanging, not staining tissues, taste acrid. The spore print is cream with a pinkish tint. The edibility of Lactarius pubescens has been described as unknown, poisonous, and even edible.\nEdibility: Ambiguous and controversial. In Russia is consumed after prolonged boiling followed by a marinating process. However it is reported to have caused gastro-intestinal upsets. Therefore, its consumption should not be recommended and this species considered toxic (source Wikipedia).
Fly agaric mushrooms are fabulous. Mushrooms grow in a fabulous dark mystical forest.
Mushrooms: Amanita Muscaria
White, Brown, Red, Orange, Yellow Mushrooms in Forest
Red mushroom in close up on a late autumn day
Fly Agaric Amanita muscaria fungus in a autumn woodland setting.
Close-up of an amanita fly agaric mushroom among grass and branches.\nLocation: Wellin, Ardennes, Belgium, Europe
Red Wild Amanita Muscaria Mushroom. A red Amanita Muscaria mushroom growing in the wild.
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.
Boletus edulis known as cep, penny bun, porcino or porcini. The stout stipe, or stem, is white or pale brown with a white network pattern, or reticulations.
View of a brown mushrooms on the soil in forest.
These poisonous toadstools are easily recognisable, with the red cap and white spots
Amanita muscaria or common fly agaric mushroom captured in a wood in the swiss mountains. The image was captured at an altitude of 1'800 m in the canton of glarus.
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