- Aureoboletus tibethanus grows in oak forests
- Aureoboletus thibetanus Veil Detail DW ms
- Aureoboletus thibetanus Tango S
Aureoboletus thibetanus Bhutan - Aureoboletus thibetanus Taktsang DW Ms
- Aureoboletus thibetanus Disp4 DW Ms
- Aureoboletus thibetanus 1 DW Ms
- Aureoboletus mirabilis growing in Girdwood, Alaska
- Audience of 400 students (not all visible here) for my Mushroom talk at Yibi Labtsa Tangtibi School
- At first Drolma was a bit closed and standish apart.
But she really got into mushrooms and kept bringing specimens. - At a village meeting Daniel presents the most common edible mushrooms.
- Asterophora lycoperdoides growing on old Russula nigricans below Chari monastery.
This weird fungus grows as a parasite on other mushrooms, mainly on Russula. Its gills are nearly absent. Asexual spores are produced on the mushrooms cap, cloning itself. The spores of Asterophora are star-shaped, hence the name star bearer. They are part of the Lyophyllaceae. - Asterophora lycoperdoides growing on a decaying Russula.
- Asterophora lycoperdoides - note how some of the turn brown. Spores are produced similar to a puffball.
- Aspen stand Eagle S
Aspen stand Eagle S - Aseröe rubra Sm
Aseröe rubra Kauai - Hawaii - Ascopolyporus sp. (Corducipitataceae) growing in Chivor above Sta Maria, Boyaca, Colombia
This interesting Cordyceps relative parasitizes aphids. However, most of its resources it receives from the plant , often a bamboo stem, the aphid tapped into before having a fungal infection. The aphid turns basically into a straw for the Ascopolyporus. - Ascopolyporus polychrous on bamboo #84 immature
- Ascopolyporus polychrous #84 transect
- Ascopolyporus polychrous #84 overmature
- Ascopolyporus polychrous #84