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Hedgehog mushroom (Hydnum repandum)
Pleurotus ostreatus, the oyster mushroom growing on oak tree trunk.
Wild Mushroom, Sierra de Guadarrama National Park, Segovia, Castile Leon, Spain, Europe
Mushrooms, Moss
Hedgehog Fungus Hydnum repandum
japanese mushroom matsutake
Giant wolf's vesse (calvatia gigantea) in a meadow.
Fresh porcini mushrooms isolated on a white background. Copy space.
Eaten maggot boletus on the forest floor
Albatrellus ovinus. Edible mushroom
an edible mushroom born in the undergrowth on the slopes of Etna in Sicily
Some of these mushrooms, which grow in various colors, are poisonous.
Four white Agaricus mushrooms stand in a tight group, centered in this monochrome horizontal composition, all touching, emerging from a forest floor.  The mushrooms appear close up, and one is significantly larger than the other three, and leans toward the right of frame.
White mushroom , Tricholoma  crassum , Macrocybe Crassa
Calvatia excipuliformis (Pers.) Perdek. syn. Handkea excipuliformis (Scop.) Kreisel syn. Lycoperdon saccatum Schaeff. ex Fr. syn. C. saccata (Fr.) Morgan syn. L. excipuliformis Schaeff. ex Pers. Beutel-Stäubling Lycoperdon en sac. Fruit body 8–20cm high, pestle-shaped, head 3–12cm across, pale buff at first then brownish, outer surface of small spines or warts which soon disappear exposing the yellowish, papery inner wall of which the upper portion breaks away to expose the spores. Gleba purplish-brown at maturity; sterile base of sponge-like texture, brownish and occupying the entire stem. Spores olive-brown, globose and warted, 3.5–5.5µ in diameter. Habitat on waste ground, heaths, pastures and woodland. Season late summer to autumn but the sterile stalk and empty cup-like base of the head may persist for many months. Common. Edible when young. Distribution, America and Europe. This photograph shows unusually short-stemmed specimens; the young one (bottom right) is the most typically shaped (source R. Phillips).\n \nThis is a quite common Fungus in the Netherlands.
oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus pulmonarius)
White mushroom in fall on forest floor, Connecticut. Classic composition.
Natural closeup on fresh emerged pale colored European St. George's mushroom, Calocybe gambosa
porcini mushroom on white background
Tripple mushroom caps of Cyptotrama asprata (Daidaigasa) mushroom (Natural+flash light, macro close-up photography)
Boletus edulis...porcini mushroom
Una gran seta rompiendo la tierra en un pinar
Xerocomellus chrysenteron, formerly known as Boletus chrysenteron or Xerocomus chrysenteron, is a small, edible, wild mushroom in the family Boletaceae. These mushrooms have tubes and pores instead of gills beneath their caps. It is commonly known as the red cracking bolete. \nDescription:\nYoung specimens often have a dark, dry surface, and tomentose caps. When fully expanded, the brownish cap ranges from 4 to 10 cm in diameter with very little substance and thin flesh that turns a blue color when slightly cut or bruised. The caps mature to convex and plane in old age. Cracks in the mature cap reveal a thin layer of light red flesh below the skin. The 1 to 2 cm-diameter stems have no ring, are mostly bright yellow and the lower part is covered in coral-red fibrils and has a constant elliptical to fusiform diameter throughout its length of 4 to 10 cm tall. The cream-colored stem flesh turns blue when cut. The species has large, yellow, angular pores, and produces an olive brown spore print. \nDistribution and habitat:\nXerocomellus chrysenteron grows singly or in small groups in hardwood/conifer woods from early fall to mid-winter. It is mycorrhizal with hardwood trees, often beech and Oak on well drained soils. It is frequent in parts of the northern temperate zones. \nEdibility:\nXerocomellus chrysenteron is considered edible but not desirable due to bland flavor and soft texture. The pores are recommended to be removed immediately after mushrooms are picked as they rapidly decay. Young fungi are palatable and suitable for drying, but they become slimy when cooked; mature specimens are rather tasteless and decay quickly (source Wikipedia).\n\nThis is a common Species in the Netherlands. I found the Mushroom under Oak Trees in Flevoland.
mushroom (cep - boletus) broken, with the cap, and the foot
Close-up of a tinder fungus growing on a tree
Albatrellus mushroom isolated on white background
Ugly form mushroom on white table.
Giant puffball mushroom on lawn in Connecticut, late summer/early fall
Free Images: "bestof:Albatrellus ovinus 2.jpg Albatrellus ovinus on Prague international mushroom exhibition 2008 Czech Republic Krásnoporka mlynářka Albatrellus ovinus 12"
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