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Mushrooms under conifers in the Connecticut woods, possibly members of the genus Amanita, which contains some of the deadliest mushrooms, including the death cap and destroying angel
Coprinellus disseminatus, a small white mushroom with a striped crown growing in large groups or colonies on dead tree trunks. This species is known as Fairy inkcap and Trooping crumble cap.
Stropharia ambigua. Uvas Canyon County Park, Santa Clara County, California, USA.
Deadly Destroying Angel mushroom on a human palm
Beautiful, small, white mushrooms growing on a tree trunk in forest. Natural autumn woodlands scenery in Latvia, Northern Europe.
Tricholoma equestre fungus, macro shot showing the foot of the fungi.
A mushroom Russula virescens is a basidiomycete mushroom of the genus Russula, and is commonly known as the green-cracking russula, the quilted green russula or green brittlegill. Mushroom with a green or grey cap and white stem growing among fallen leaves in autumn forest.
Close-up of a turkey tail mushroom growing on the floor of a woodland in Minnesota, USA.
Poisonous mushroom in the ground in the forest in autumn.
Amanita phalloides (Fr.) Link in Willd. Death Cap, Amanite phalloide, Oronge ciquë vert, Grüner Knollenblätterpilz, Tignosa verdognola, Groene knolamaniet, Gyilkos galóca. Cap 6-15cm across, convex then flattened; variable in color but usually greenish or yellowish with an olivaceous disc and paler margin; also, paler and almost white caps do occur occasionally; smooth, slightly sticky when wet, with faint, radiating fibers often giving it a streaked appearance; occasionally white patches of volval remnants can be seen on cap. Gills free, close, broad; white. Stem 60-140 x 10-20mm, solid, sometimes becoming hollow, tapering slightly toward the top; white, sometimes flushed with cap color; smooth to slightly scaly; the ball-shaped basal bulb is encased in a large, white, lobed, saclike volva. Veil partial veil leaves skirt-like ring hanging near the top of the stem. Flesh firm, thicker on disc; white to pale yellowish green beneath cap cuticle. Odor sickly sweet becoming disagreeable. Spores broadly ellipsoid to subglobose, amyloid, 8-10.5 x 7-9µ. Deposit white. Habitat singly or in small groups on the ground in mixed coniferous and deciduous woods. Quite common in Europe. This is the most deadly fungus known, and despite years of detailed research into the toxins it contains, no antidote exists against their effects on the human body. Poisoning by Amanita phalloides is characterized by a delay of between six and twenty-four hours from the time of ingestion to the onset of symptoms, during which time the cells of the liver and kidneys are attacked (source R. Phillips). \n\nThis deadly poisonous Species is quite common in the Dutch Woods.
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
The parasol mushroom 'Macrolepiota procera' or 'Lepiota procera' growing in the forest.
Mushroom Paxillus involutus, commonly known as the brown roll-rim, common roll-rim, or poison pax  in forest in the ground
Autumn in Pyrenees, Catalonian undergrowth.. during autumn season.
Morchella mushroom in the forest as background
Close up of cute Parasol mushroom in grass
Meadow mushrooms
Toadstool near East Madison near White Mountain. These are toadstools growing on wet ground.
Close up of a pair of shaggy parasol (chlorophyllum rhacodes) mushrooms in a meadow
Pick your poison. Coker's amanita (Amanita cokeri), a poisonous mushroom, in a poison ivy patch in the Connecticut woods.
Close-up picture of a Amanita poisonous mushroom in nature.
A single mushroom growing on the forest floor.
The small mushrooms in the grass are in the wild, North China
Coprinus Coprinus comatus (Fr.) S. F. Gray. Shaggy Mane, Shaggy Inkcap, Lawyer’s Wig, Coprin chevelu, Schopftintling, Agarico chiomato, Geschubde inktzwam, Gyapjas tintagomba. Cap 3-7cm across when expanded, more or less a tall ovoid when young, becoming more cylindrical as it expands; white and very shaggy-scaly, often with a pale brownish \
Three white fresh young mushrooms green juicy grass.
Autumn in pre-Pyrenees, Catalonian undergrowth.. during autumn season.\n\nLepiota
False parasol mushroom (Chlorophyllum molybdites). Called Green-spored lepiota and Vomiter also.
View of a mushroom on the soil in in pine forest.
a composition of mushrooms on a gray background
Honey mushrooms in the New England woods, September
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