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  2. Matsutake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matsutake

    The candy cane plant or sugarstick, Allotropa virgata, parasitizes these mushrooms by deriving nourishment from the fungal mycelia via its root system. [11] These plants can be used to signal hunters of the mushrooms, both human and animal, to the location of the fungus’ underground mycelia.

  3. Shimeji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shimeji

    Japanese popular mushrooms, clockwise from left, enokitake, buna-shimeji, bunapi-shimeji, king oyster mushroom and shiitake (front). Lyophyllum shimeji Bunapi (developed by Hokuto Corporation) Shimeji (Japanese: シメジ, 占地 or 湿地) is a group of edible mushrooms native to East Asia, but also found in northern Europe. [1]

  4. List of poisonous fungus species - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_poisonous_fungus...

    Scientific name Common name Active agent Distribution Similar edible species Picture Agaricus californicus: California Agaricus: phenol and xanthodermin: North America Edible Agaricus species Agaricus hondensis [1] Felt-ringed Agaricus: phenol and xanthodermin: North America Edible Agaricus species Agaricus menieri: phenol and xanthodermin: Europe

  5. Flammulina filiformis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammulina_filiformis

    Flammulina filiformis, commonly called enoki mushroom, is a species of edible agaric (gilled mushroom) in the family Physalacriaceae. It is widely cultivated in East Asia, and well known for its role in Japanese and Chinese cuisine .

  6. Shiitake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiitake

    The mushroom's Japanese name shiitake is a compound word composed of shii (椎, Castanopsis), for the tree Castanopsis cuspidata that provides the dead logs on which it is typically cultivated, and take (茸, "mushroom"). [5] The specific epithet edodes is the Latin word for "edible". [6]

  7. Lingzhi (mushroom) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingzhi_(mushroom)

    Lingzhi, also known as reishi from its Japanese pronunciation, is the ancient "mushroom of immortality", revered for over 2,000 years (with some evidence suggesting use in Neolithic China 6,800 years ago). [8] However, as of 2023 there is an ongoing debate on which one of the described Ganoderma species is the true lingzhi mushroom.

  8. Omphalotus japonicus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omphalotus_japonicus

    Inoko first described this fungus as Pleurotus noctilucens in 1889, however the name proved invalid as the binomial had already been used for another species. [2] Given the name Pleurotus japonicus by Seiichi Kawamura in 1915, it was given the name Lampteromyces japonicus by Rolf Singer in 1947, [1] until the genus Lampteromyces was sunk into Omphalotus in 2004. [4]

  9. Agaricus subrufescens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agaricus_subrufescens

    Agaricus subrufescens (syn. Agaricus blazei, Agaricus brasiliensis or Agaricus rufotegulis) is a species of mushroom, commonly known as almond mushroom, almond agaricus, mushroom of the sun, God's mushroom, mushroom of life, royal sun agaricus, jisongrong, or himematsutake (Chinese: 姬松茸, Japanese: 姫まつたけ, "princess matsutake").

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