#false Turkey tail
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#raccoon#animal tracks#mushrooms#fungus#fungi#mushroomcore#procyon lotor#false Turkey tail#polypore#abandoned#gfdelmar og#adventurecore
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Hairy curtain crust with some lovely pale green lichen
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This is Professor Samuel, and he’s been helping me identify mushrooms. Part 2. (Part 1)
#mushrooms#fungi#mycology#polypores#trametes versicolor#stereum hirsutum#turkey tail#false turkey tail#lenzites betulina#gilled polypore#mushroom photography#nature photography#original photography#info
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Forgot to post these mushy pics I took!
False Turkey tail I believe :^]
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#fall#mushrooms#fungi#false turkey tail#film#fujicolor 400#olympus stylus infinity#autumn#north carolina
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False turkey tail 》 Stereum ostrea
Possibly Stereum fasciatum. I have seen some disagreement as to whether S. ostrea is found in North America.
Caddo Lake State Park, Texas, 3 Aug. 2024
#amatuer mycology#mushrooms#mushroom hunting#mycology#fungi#mushrooms of texas#texas mushrooms#fungi of texas#wild fungi#fungarium#mushroom foraging#foraging texas#wild mushrooms#mushroom#mushroom identification#mushroom species#species identification#fungi species#fungus#crust fungus#stereum#false turkey tail#nature photography#canon rebel#naturecore#goblincore#crowcore#special interest#rot#decay
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#hairy curtain crust#false turkey tail#stereum#bracket fungi#shelf fungi#scrub oak#quercus#close up nature#green valley falls#cuyamaca
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#my photos#mushrooms#i still cant identify real turkey tail vs false turkey tail so i dont know what these are#pretty sure they have pores if that helps
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False Turkey-tail | Stereum ostrea
#false turkey-tail mushroom#mushrooms#nature#nature photography#phone photography#original photography on tumblr#mushroom photography
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By Kayjaybee Photography
#kayjaybee photography#kjb photography#nature photography#my photography#original photography#photographers on tumblr#mushroom photography#false oysters#turkey tail#mushroom obsession#mushrooms
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Turkey tail and stereum growing together
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#hike#mushroom#fungi#trees#nature#seattle#pnw#green#turkey tail#false#bracket#brown#rings#mushroom core#cottage core
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Hello! Your banner says that if you ask about mushrooms, you can talk about them for hours, let's check. 1) What is your favorite mushroom and why? 2) What effects of mushrooms on both animals and people do you know? 3) From question 2, which effect do you like the most in terms of effectiveness? 4) What do you think of the cordyceps mushroom? 5) What is your favorite dish based on mushrooms or a dish where mushrooms are an additive?
!!WARNING!! I am not a mycologist or fungi expert! I'm just a girl who has been hyperfixated on mycology for three years and counting lmfao. My information comes mostly from books written by mycologists and expert foragers, but take this all with a grain of salt lol. I do not know everything, and there's a chance I'm straight-up wrong about some of this! I don't think I am, I would never intentionally spread incorrect information, but be careful just in case! anyways, mandatory warning out of the way, on to the potentially-partially-misinformed-but-I-don't-think-it-is infodump!!!
1)
Okay, I think this is the seventh time I’ve answered the question about my favourite mushroom 😭, I’ll answer again instead of just linking it this time lol.
I have a few favourites for a few different reasons!
The violet court/webcap (more than the viscid violet court, but I do love that one too lol) is one of my favourites purely because it is a beautiful rich purple to black colour- it’s really pretty! I also like the bluefoot bonnet, and the newly discovered Mycena subcyanocephala mushroom and the Stropharia caerulea mushrooms are also beautiful. Bioluminescent fungi are absolutely mesmerizing in the dark too! I couldn’t pick my favourite beautiful mushroom lol.
For sentimental reasons, the mica cap mushroom was the first one that I ever spore-printed, the prince mushroom was the first one I ever foraged and ate, and the king oyster was the first one I ever grew myself!
2)
…okay, I know a lot. I mostly just know of their effects on humans though, so apologies. I’ll rant about one particular poisonous example to start, the destroying angel! It’s a particularly brutal one, because the symptoms often won’t show up for hours or even days after you ate the mushroom, and a lot of times at that point it’s already too late. It also has a brief period where you think or feel like you’re getting better, before it comes back in full swing to kill you. Typical symptoms of a messed up stomach, along with kidney and/or liver failure. It’s brutal, and it’s very common for patients who are hospitalized by it to die, because by the time they feel bad enough to go to the hospital, the poison is well in their systems. It’s closely related to the death cap, and together they are known as the deadly duo. Another interesting one is the Alcohol Inky, Inky cap or Tippler’s bane mushroom! It’s edible- unless you have alcohol in your system. Even the tiniest bit before or after eating this mushroom (with a four-day buffer) will set off poisonous reactions! Hence the name “Tippler’s bane” lol. On a more positive note, there’s tons of medical mushrooms! Turkey tail has been used to strengthen the immune system of cancer patients. The agarikon has been used to strengthen lungs, treat asthma and help with coughs! Of course, a famous example of a medical fungi is the penicillin vaccine that saved polio patients, but I don’t know too much about that so I’ll try to avoid spreading false information lol. It is amazing though! Even psilocybe- magic mushrooms- have been used to treat PTSD, OCD, depression etc. (CLINICALLY of course, don’t do drugs kids lmao). Hallucinogenic mushrooms are a whole other story about their effects on humans and other animals, and I admit I’m not that knowledgeable about that side of the foraging appeal lol. LSD is kinda wack, to put it bluntly. You kinda have to do shrooms to properly understand the effects lmfao- You gotta be one with the mushroom, man.
3)
Personally, I haven’t experienced any of these effects myself. I have yet to poison myself, I tend to turn to Tylenol instead of fungi when I’m sick and I haven’t done shrooms lmao. I think that the poisonous mushrooms are very cool and effective, there are so many different ways that fungi can try to kill a human, and it’s very fascinating how they each go about it! The death cap in particular is a very effective killer, so props to it.
4)
ah, cordyceps. The inspiration for The Last of Us, one of the finest irl body horror parasites, an equally disturbing and fascinating fungi!
I think cordyceps is a very incredible fungi, although I’d probably have a different opinion if I was a particularly unlucky bug who got infected with it. For those of you who don’t know what cordyceps is, it’s a brutal parasitic fungi responsible for the horrors known as zombie ants. A mycelium system grows inside the ant and fucks up its head, in the simplest of terms. The ant suddenly has a very strong urge to climb, and so it does, typically to the underside highest leaf it can get to. From there, it locks it’s mandibles to the leaf and stays there until it dies (this can take a few days, which must really suck for the ant). The mycelium makes itself known, attaching to the leaf and making the ant appear white and fuzzy, and then a mushroom pops out of its body and spreads its spores far and wide to go commit more atrocities in the cordyceps family name.
cordyceps isn’t the only fungi that’s parasitic on insects, although it is perhaps the best known. Some fungi in this parasite branch are even parasitic on other fungi, while some are the boogeymen haunting the dreams of larvae, caterpillars, spiders and more. Luckily none go after humans, so we’re safe for now! Insects are simply smaller and easier to take over, and aren’t filled with as much blood, complicated organs, immune system defences and body heat. Fungi could probably figure out a way to do this to us, but it’s simply more convenient for them to not. There are tons of fungi that are parasitic to humans though, they just don’t turn us into zombies!
5)
This Morel soup I had at a mycology convention once. It was so fire lmao.
#Ask me about mycoheterotrophs and the wood wide web lol#My record for that is an hour and twenty minutes of yapping#Anyways#fungi rant time!!!#:D#none of these things are really what I know the most about#But I can infodump about most mushroom related topics when given the chance lol#Fungi reproduction and behaviour is also something I could probably yap about for a bit lol#I know more about actual fungi than the mushrooms they fruit lol
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Fungi time
As autumn intensifies whole woods, logs, lawns and heaths come alive with enchanting colour, eccentric fruiting bodies of fungal wonders.
The fairytale toadstool, ruby and white-spotted fly agarics spring up, pizza like as they unfurl. Enigmatic pure purple amethyst deceivers and otherworldly devil’s fingers sights to behold; as are mysterious shaggy ink caps that emerge in the grass and warm coloured shaggy scalycaps that huddle around tree bases. Yellow stagshorn, club-like tuning fork and candlesnuff fungi rise into the air. The mighty parasols, complex panthercaps, puffball, earthball and false death caps bring beautiful patterns. It's satisfying to observe bleeding fairy helmets, waxcaps, the meandering patterns of turkey tail; earthstars and eyelash fungi other treasured prizes of captivating fungi watching walks.
#fungi#photography#fly agaric#amethyst deceiver#devil's fingers#yellow stagshorn#new forest#woodland#lawn#autumn#outdoors#nature
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Turkey tail or false turkey taili believe?
Thursday March 7th 2024 8;45 am
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