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  2. Geopora cooperi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geopora_cooperi

    Geopora cooperi, commonly known as the pine truffle or the fuzzy truffle, is a species of fungus in the family Pyronemataceae. It has a fuzzy brown outer surface and an inner surface of whitish, convoluted folds of tissue. Widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere, the species has been recorded from Asia, Europe, and North America.

  3. Tuber oregonense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_oregonense

    Tuber oregonense, commonly known as the Oregon white truffle, is a species of edible truffle in the genus Tuber. Described as new to science in 2010, the North American species is found on the western coast of the United States, from northern California to southern British Columbia west of the Cascade Range .

  4. Tuber melanosporum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_melanosporum

    Black truffles are now also cultivated in Australia, New Zealand, Chile, [22] North America, Argentina, South Africa, [15] [23] and Wales. [24] Cultivation involves the planting of, for example, hazel trees whose roots are inoculated with truffle mycelium. The first fruiting bodies can be harvested about 4–10 years after planting the trees. [25]

  5. Truffle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truffle

    Mauléon saw an "obvious symbiosis" between the oak tree, the rocky soil, and the truffle and attempted to reproduce such an environment by taking acorns from trees known to have produced truffles and sowing them in chalky soil. [59] [60] His experiment was successful, with truffles found in the soil around the newly grown oak trees years later.

  6. What Exactly Is a Truffle and Why Does It Cost So Much? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/exactly-truffle-why-does...

    Truffles are a type of edible fungi that grow underground near the roots of certain oak trees. They have a unique flavor that's savory and earthy. What Exactly Is a Truffle and Why Does It Cost So ...

  7. Leucangium carthusianum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leucangium_carthusianum

    Leucangium carthusianum is a species of ascomycete fungus. It is commonly known as the Oregon black truffle. [1] It is found in the Pacific Northwest region of North America, where it grows in an ectomycorrhizal association with Douglas-fir. It is commercially collected, usually assisted by a specially trained truffle dog. [2]

  8. Tolypocladium ophioglossoides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolypocladium_ophioglossoides

    Tolypocladium ophioglossoides, also known by two of its better known synonyms Elaphocordyceps ophioglossoides and Cordyceps ophioglossoides and commonly known as the goldenthread cordyceps, [5] is a species of fungus in the family Ophiocordycipitaceae. It is parasitic on fruit bodies of the truffle-like Elaphomyces.

  9. Tuber (fungus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuber_(fungus)

    Harvested white truffle (Tuber magnatum) at Ceva, Cuneo, Italy. Tuber is a genus in the fungal family Tuberaceae, with estimated molecular dating to the end of the Jurassic period (156 Mya). [2] It includes several species of truffles that are highly valued as delicacies.