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The North American Mycological Association (NAMA), is a non-profit organization of amateurs and professionals who are interested in fungi, including mushrooms, morels, truffles, molds, and related organisms. NAMA aims "to promote, pursue, and advance the science of mycology." [1]
The South Sound Mushroom Club, which has been around since the 1970s, leads regular forays (or mushroom hunts) with experts, in addition to monthly meetings, educational seminars, cooking demos ...
The mat and wrinkled fruiting body has the shape of a club with a rounded top. Its length varies between 10 and 30 centimetres (4 and 12 in) and its width between 1 and 5 cm ( 1 ⁄ 2 and 2 in). The skin is red brown to ocher red, sometimes cinnamon brown with a lilac tint, turning brown when damaged.
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The club portion of the fruit body is pale yellow, whitish sharp, straight, and stiff hairs at its base. The surface is dull, and does not have hairs. It is smooth at first then later becomes somewhat wrinkled. It is club-shaped to spoon-shaped, and up to 12 cm (4.7 in) tall by 2 cm (0.8 in) wide at the thickest part.
A snowbank mushroom, it is associated with melting snow, and fruiting is initiated under snowbanks. The fungus has been recorded from the mountains of Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, northern Arizona, and northern California. [4] The European distribution extends from the French Pyrenees to the region of Prague. [6]
The species has a yellow-orange fruiting body in the shape of a club with a flat cap. [7] The flesh is white, thin, and hollow at the top. [8] The vertical side of the fruiting body normally has folds and wrinkles, but can be smooth. The spores are smooth and their spore print is pale yellow to ochre. [9] The mushroom has a pleasant odor and a ...
Pleurotus populinus, the aspen oyster mushroom, is a gilled fungus native to North America.It is found on dead wood of aspen and cottonwood trees (genus Populus).Although morphologically similar to Pleurotus ostreatus and Pleurotus pulmonarius, it has been shown to be a distinct species incapable of cross-breeding. [1]