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  2. Phallus indusiatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phallus_indusiatus

    The rehydrated mushroom can also be stuffed and cooked. [53] Phallus indusiatus has been cultivated on a commercial scale in China since 1979. [49] In the Fujian Province of China—known for a thriving mushroom industry that cultivates 45 species of edible fungi—P. indusiatus is produced in the counties of Fuan, Jianou, and Ningde. [54]

  3. Gymnopilus maritimus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnopilus_maritimus

    The subgenus is characterised by mushrooms that feature either no veils, or veils that do not form rings. The section Macrospori, proposed by Guzmán-Dávalos in 1995, is made up of large-spored species with ringless mushrooms. [10]

  4. Psilocybe semilanceata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_semilanceata

    The mushroom has a thin cobweb-like partial veil that does not last long before disappearing; sometimes, the partial veil leaves an annular zone on the stipe that may be darkened by spores. [22] The flesh is thin and membrane-like, and roughly the same color as the surface tissue. It has a farinaceous (similar to freshly ground flour) odor and ...

  5. Pleurotus dryinus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleurotus_dryinus

    The gills are only slightly decurrent, no ring. Lentinus levis (Berk. & M.A. Curtis) Murrill (1915) This American mushroom, which has been classified as a Pleurotus, is reportedly easy to mistake for P. dryinus. [14] It has no cap scales and no ring or veil remnants, and the felty surface is different. [15] Pleurotus albertinii [Fr.) Sacc. (1887)

  6. Partial veil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partial_veil

    A partial veil, in contrast to a universal veil, extends from the stem surface to the cap edge. The partial veil later disintegrates, once the fruiting body has matured and the spores are ready for dispersal. It might then give rise to a stem ring, or fragments attached to the stem or cap edge. In some mushrooms, both a partial veil and a ...

  7. Psilocybe ovoideocystidiata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybe_ovoideocystidiata

    Psilocybe ovoideocystidiata is a psilocybin mushroom, having psilocybin and/or psilocin as main active compounds. It is closely related to P. subaeruginascens from Java, P. septentrionalis from Japan, and P. wayanadensis from India. This mushroom was first documented by Richard V. Gaines in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania in June 2003.

  8. Amanita gemmata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_gemmata

    Young mushrooms have a membranous partial veil extending from the upper stem to the cap margin; as the mushroom grows, the partial veil tears to leave a flimsy, skirt-like, easily lost ring on the stem. At the base of the stem is a white volva (a remnant of the universal veil that covered the immature mushroom) that usually forms a small, free rim.

  9. Phallus ravenelii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phallus_ravenelii

    In 1898, [6] Edward Angus Burt placed the taxon in the genus Dictyophora, based on the presence of the veil. [7] Otto Kuntze transferred the taxon to the genus Aedycia (now equivalent with Mutinus), [8] resulting in the synonym Aedycia ravenelii. [1] The mushroom is commonly known as the eastern stinkhorn [9] or Ravenel's stinkhorn. [10]