Presentation on the topic: "Amazing mushrooms. There are many forms of mushrooms that are not similar to each other

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  • A fairly common mushroom in Australia. It has bad smell kind of like rotten meat. With this smell, the mushroom attracts flies, which are distributors of spores of this type of fungus. Sticky calocera (Calocera viscosa)
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    • By appearance of this fungus, you might think that its habitat is the seabed. The fruit body is elongated, vertical, egg-colored with shades of ocher, sometimes slightly reddening. The sticky calocera reaches 5-6 cm in length and up to 1 cm in diameter. The fruiting bodies of the colony readily coalesce at the base and continue to grow in a small "bush". The mushroom grows in large colonies, less often singly, on the remains of rotten wood. From the point of view of edibility, there are different opinions about sticky calocera, some sources consider it edible, but are silent about its possible processing, others do not mention it at all in the lists edible mushrooms. However, the calocera did not get to the poisonous ones either. It is believed that due to its small size and rarity, the mushroom never got its place in the culinary series, and is considered inedible.
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    • Clavaria pale brown (Clavaria zollingeri) A widespread species of mushrooms. It has a tubular purple or pinkish-purple body that grows up to 10 cm high and 7 cm wide. Scientists have determined that there are about 1,200 species of clavaria that come in different shades, ranging from white to bright orange and purple. These mushrooms grow in many places, mostly in tropical areas, and are considered inedible.
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    • Azure mushroom (Entoloma hochstetteri) Dwells in the forests of New Zealand and India. These blue mushrooms may be poisonous, but their toxicity is poorly understood. It gets its distinctive blue color from the pigment azulin, found in the fruiting body, which is also found in some marine invertebrates.
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    • Four-bladed starfish (Geastrum quadrifidum) Refers to puffball mushrooms that can be found in different places and elevations around the world. This unusual mushroom changes its appearance after it emerges from the ground. Its "rays" bend down, the round fruiting body rises and releases spores into the air. growing for the most part on sandy soil in deciduous, mixed and coniferous-pine, spruce, pine-spruce and spruce-wide deciduous forests(among the fallen needles). It is considered inedible due to its bitter taste. In some Indian tribes, this mushroom is known for its medicinal properties, and also according to belief, he predicts the upcoming celestial phenomena.
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    • Elastic lobe (Helvella elastica) Grows in moist, sparse, mostly deciduous forests, from July to late September, singly or in groups. The hat is two-lobed, saddle-shaped, light yellowish or grayish-brown, whitish or pink below, 1.5-4 cm wide and high. Leg up to 7 cm long, 0.2-0.4 cm thick, cylindrical, widened downwards, with small and shallow longitudinal grooves, whitish or brownish, smooth. Elastic lobe is conditionally edible. Used dried. In boiled form, it can be used only after boiling and removing the broth.
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    • Bearded Mushroom (Hericium erinaceus) This mushroom, which looks like noodles or pompon, is known by many names: lion's mane mushroom, bearded tooth mushroom, hedgehog mushroom, etc. At first glance, it does not cause any associations with a mushroom. This edible mushroom grows on both living and dead trees, and when cooked, resembles seafood in color and texture. Not only does it taste good, but it is also used in traditional Chinese medicine, possessing antioxidant properties and lowering blood glucose levels.
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    • Bleeding mushroom (Hydnellum peckii) Quite an original mushroom that can be found on sandy soils in a coniferous forest. The surface of young fruiting bodies is velvety, white, with small tubercles, turning brown with age. On the upper surface of young specimens, drops of a blood-red liquid protrude. It grows in autumn on the ground in coniferous (spruce and pine) forests. It is inedible due to its strong bitter taste. It can be called differently, but whatever name it is, it will certainly be associated with blood or juice. It can be found in North America, it is most common in the Pacific Northwest and grows mainly in coniferous forests.
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    • Milky blue (Lactarius indigo) A fairly common type of mushroom, grows in the eastern part of North America, East Asia and Central America. It grows on the ground in both deciduous and coniferous forests. The cap of the mushroom has a diameter of 5 to 15 cm, a denim-blue color, a shape that changes over time from convex to funnel-shaped. In young mushrooms, the surface layer is sticky. The leg, which has a height of 2 to 6 cm and a thickness of 1 to 2.5 cm, is cylindrical, thick, denim-blue in color, a silver-gray tint may be present. . The mushroom is edible and sold in rural markets in Mexico, Guatemala and China.
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    • Mutinus dog (lat. Mutinus caninus). The young mushroom has a pinkish or white color and oval or elongated. It is not recommended to eat it, since it is still not known exactly whether this mushroom is edible or not. Interestingly, the dark top of the mushroom exudes a specific smell to attract insects, like cat feces. When insects gnaw at the top of the fungus, it turns orange, and then the entire fruiting body begins to decompose, and after 3-4 days nothing remains of the fungus.
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    • Bird's nest (Nidulariaceae) Bird's nest is a fungus belonging to the mold group. The mushroom owes its name to its unusual appearance, resembling a bird's nest with tiny testicles. This form contributes to the favorable spread of spores: under the pressure of rainwater that has entered the nest, the fungus spits them out within a radius of a meter from itself, which allows it to occupy more and more new territories for breeding. fern, and sometimes on animal excrement.
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    • Astringent panellus (Panellus stipticus) Hat 2-4 cm in diameter, reniform, lateral, light brown, finely scaly or finely fluffy, with a hairy, slightly curved thin edge. The plates are narrow, frequent, the same color with a cap or darker. The pulp is thin, leathery, brownish. Leg 0.5-2 cm tall, 0.2-0.6 cm wide, eccentric, thickened upwards, solid, of the same color with a hat, pubescent, then smooth. Grows large groups, growing together with the bases of the legs, on fallen trees and stumps. From April to November. European part Russia, North Caucasus, Siberia, Primorsky Territory. Inedible.
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    • Rhodotus palmatus This mushroom is the only representative of the genus in the Physalacriaceae family. Not very common. Found throughout the northern hemisphere: in eastern North America, in North Africa, Europe and Asia. In Europe, it is included in many lists of species that are threatened with extinction. It grows on stumps and decaying wood. The fruiting body of mature mushrooms is a characteristic pink color with a mesh pattern on a dense cap. Size, shape and color vary depending on the lighting.
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    • Trembling orange (Tremella mesenterica) Consists of smooth, shiny and sinuous blades. In appearance, the blades are watery and shapeless, a bit reminiscent of the intestines. The fruit body is approximately 1-4 cm in height. The color of the fruit body varies from almost white to bright yellow or orange. because of a large number spores located on the surface, the fungus seems whitish. The pulp is gelatinous, but strong, odorless. Like all Tremella, Tremella mesenterica tends to dry out, and after rain, it becomes the same again. Occurs from August to the end of autumn. Often the fungus persists in winter, forming with the onset of spring fruit bodies. Grows on dead branches deciduous trees. If the conditions are favorable, then it bears fruit very abundantly. It grows both on the plains and on the mountains. In places with a mild climate, the entire mushroom period can bear fruit. The mushroom is edible, although tasteless, and even has some value, but not in our country. Our mushroom pickers have no idea how to collect this mushroom, how to carry it home and how to cook it so that it does not dissolve.
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    • Amber-Brown raincoat Brown raincoat (Lycoperdon umbrinum). This type of fungus grows in China, Europe and North America. These mushrooms do not have an open cap with spores. Instead, spores appear inside, in a spherical body. When ripe, the spores form a gleba in the center of the body, which has a characteristic color and texture.
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    • Mushroom "earthen asterisk" or starfish (lat. Geastrum). When ripe, this mushroom is shaped like a star with sharp rays down, and in the center there is a small convex ball - its fruiting body, which contains a spore-bearing sac and releases spores into the air. The color of the mushroom "earth star" is not bright, it grows all over the world, and belongs to puffball mushrooms. Indian tribes used it for medicinal purposes, and they also believed that the "earth star" had the ability to predict celestial phenomena.
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    • False morel (lat. Gyromitra esculenta). In appearance, this fungus resembles a brain. False morels occur naturally in brown and dark purple. When properly prepared, they are a kind of delicacy. However raw mushrooms poisonous, so they require careful preparation heat treatment. Only a knowledgeable and experienced person should cook them, otherwise a fatal outcome is possible.
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    • Bioluminescent mushroom (lat. Mycena Chlorophos). Glow - distinguishing feature all bioluminescent fungi (now found 71 species of such fungi). Mushrooms of the species Mycena Chlorophos glow yellow-green in the dark, during rains. Such a picture amazing beauty can be observed in Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Brazil and Puerto Rico.
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    There are many forms of mushrooms that are not similar to each other. We are used to thinking that mushrooms are gifts of nature that grow in the forest. In fact, you can walk past the mushroom without knowing it. The crust of bread is covered with mold - these are mushrooms. Something green and unpleasant has grown on the wall in a damp room - mushrooms again, an apple has gone bad - and this is the work of mushrooms.








    8 Molds Aspergillus Molds Aspergillus, there are about 160 species, mainly in the form of molds on food products, in the soil, on damp walls, etc. Some species cause disease, others are used in the production of citric acid, antibiotics, enzymes.




    Baker's yeast Yeast is also microscopically small fungi. They do not form mycelium, but grow as a mass of single cells. Yeast is used by humans to make dough, wine, and beer. Yeast cells are spherical in shape. Almost all yeasts are real "sweet teeth". Fruits and berries, flower nectar, sweet birch sap, succulent parts of plants - favorite places their habitats.


    These amazing mushrooms Shiitake (tree Japanese mushroom), the most medicinal of mushrooms, is widely used in medicine. Reduces cholesterol levels, reduces inflammation, heals ulcers, improves immunity and has many other benefits. useful properties. the most healing of mushrooms, widely used in medicine. It lowers cholesterol levels, reduces inflammation, heals ulcers, boosts immunity and has many other beneficial properties.


    These amazing mushrooms Zvezdovik or earth star The most unusual looking mushroom. Formed underground, has two shells. When the outer shell bursts, the fungus comes to the surface, and fragments of the upper shell form a kind of "star" with 5 - 10 "rays". The color of this mushroom is different - yellow, white, pink, and other colors.


    These amazing mushrooms Plasmodium The most amazing mushroom. This mushroom can walk! He moves through the forest slower than a snail, but in a few days it can climb onto a rotten stump and lurk on it. Plasmodium is not immediately noticeable, it looks like either a jellyfish or a piece of jelly. And he walks through the forest, waddling from side to side.


    These amazing mushrooms Pale grebe is the most poisonous mushroom in the world, death cap, contains at once 10 types of various poisons that affect both the nervous and digestive, but most importantly, the hematopoietic system. There is no antidote. Pale grebe - the most poisonous mushroom in the world, pale grebe, contains 10 types of different poisons at once, affecting both the nervous and digestive, but most importantly, the hematopoietic system. There is no antidote.




    These amazing mushrooms Setkonoska Mushroom is listed in the Red Book. When the shell is torn, a long, up to cm, spongy off-white leg, 2.5-4.5 cm thick, is shown, and on it is an olive-green, as it were, folded hat. An openwork white or yellowish mesh falls from under the cap onto the leg. The smell is very unpleasant.


    These amazing mushrooms Truffle Truffle The most expensive mushroom. It grows underground, it is searched for by smell by dogs and pigs. Gourmets appreciate these mushrooms for their unusual aroma. The most expensive truffle in the world was sold at auction for $. The average price of a black truffle is EUR per kg.




    These amazing mushrooms Veselka Veselka The fastest growing mushroom. In 1 hour, he can grow 30 cm! Popular names: "upstart", "devil's egg". The mushroom is edible young age considered delicious. In France, it is consumed raw as a radish. Before use, the outer shell should be removed. Applied in traditional medicine called "ground oil" for gout, rheumatism, and some diseases of the stomach.




    These amazing Red Lattice mushrooms look like a round checkered ball. It looks nice, but it smells disgusting. Flies love its smell. They pounce on him and eat him in a few hours. It grows on forest litter and on the remains of rotting wood.





    These amazing mushrooms Mushroom puffball golovach giant ball-shaped mushroom without a stem reaches a diameter of 50 cm and weighs more than 10 kg! taste. The internal mass is at first pure white, then greenish-yellow, and finally brown, drying out like a sponge. The smell is unpleasant. The remains of the fungus, resembling a washcloth, can hold out without decomposing for several months. An edible and high-quality mushroom, but not everyone likes it.

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    By the appearance of this fungus, you might think that its habitat is the seabed. The fruit body is elongated, vertical, egg-colored with shades of ocher, sometimes slightly reddening. The sticky calocera reaches 5-6 cm in length and up to 1 cm in diameter. The fruiting bodies of the colony readily coalesce at the base and continue to grow in a small "bush". The fungus grows in large colonies, rarely singly, on the remains of rotten wood. From the point of view of edibility, there are different opinions about sticky calocera, some sources consider it edible, but are silent about its possible processing, others do not mention it at all in the lists of edible mushrooms. However, the calocera did not get to the poisonous ones either. It is believed that due to its small size and rarity, the mushroom never got its place in the culinary series, and is considered inedible.

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    Clavaria pale brown (Clavaria zollingeri) A widespread species of mushrooms. It has a tubular purple or pinkish-purple body that grows up to 10 cm high and 7 cm wide. Scientists have determined that there are about 1,200 species of clavaria that come in different shades, ranging from white to bright orange and purple. These mushrooms grow in many places, mostly in tropical areas, and are considered inedible.

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    Azure mushroom (Entoloma hochstetteri) Dwells in the forests of New Zealand and India. These blue mushrooms can be poisonous, but their toxicity is poorly understood. It gets its distinctive blue color from the pigment azulin, found in the fruiting body, which is also found in some marine invertebrates.

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    Four-lobed starfish (Geastrum quadrifidum) Refers to puffball mushrooms that can be found in different places and elevations around the world. This unusual mushroom changes its appearance after it emerges from the ground. Its "rays" bend down, the round fruiting body rises and releases spores into the air. Grows mostly on sandy soil in deciduous, mixed and coniferous-pine, spruce, pine-spruce and spruce-broad-leaved forests (among fallen needles). Considered inedible due to its bitter taste. In some Indian tribes, this mushroom is known for its medicinal properties, and according to belief, it predicts upcoming celestial phenomena.

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    Elastic lobe (Helvella elastica) Grows in moist, sparse, mostly deciduous forests, from July to late September, singly or in groups. The hat is two-lobed, saddle-shaped, light yellowish or grayish-brown, whitish or pink below, 1.5-4 cm wide and high. Leg up to 7 cm long, 0.2-0.4 cm thick, cylindrical, widened downwards, with small and shallow longitudinal grooves, whitish or brownish, smooth. The elastic blade is conditionally edible. Used dried. In boiled form, it can be used only after boiling and removing the broth.

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    Bearded Mushroom (Hericium erinaceus) This mushroom, which looks like noodles or pompon, is known by many names: lion's mane mushroom, bearded tooth mushroom, hedgehog mushroom, etc. At first glance, it does not cause any associations with a mushroom. This edible mushroom grows on both living and dead trees, and when cooked, resembles seafood in color and texture. Not only does it taste good, but it is also used in traditional Chinese medicine for its antioxidant properties and lowering blood glucose levels.

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    Bleeding mushroom (Hydnellum peckii) Quite an original mushroom that can be found on sandy soils in a coniferous forest. The surface of young fruiting bodies is velvety, white, with small tubercles, turning brown with age. On the upper surface of young specimens, drops of a blood-red liquid protrude. It grows in autumn on the ground in coniferous (spruce and pine) forests. Inedible due to strong bitter taste. It can be called differently, but whatever name it is, it will certainly be associated with blood or juice. It can be found in North America, it is most common in the Pacific Northwest and grows mainly in coniferous forests.

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    Milky blue (Lactarius indigo) A fairly common type of mushroom, grows in the eastern part of North America, East Asia and Central America. It grows on the ground in both deciduous and coniferous forests. The cap of the mushroom has a diameter of 5 to 15 cm, a denim-blue color, a shape that changes over time from convex to funnel-shaped. In young mushrooms, the surface layer is sticky. The leg, having a height of 2 to 6 cm and a thickness of 1 to 2.5 cm, is cylindrical, thick, denim-blue in color, a silver-gray tint may be present. There is milky juice of denim-blue color, changing to green, caustic character. The mushroom is edible and sold in rural markets in Mexico, Guatemala and China.

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    Mutinus dog (lat. Mutinus caninus). The young mushroom has a pinkish or white color and an oval or elongated shape. It is not recommended to eat it, since it is still not known exactly whether this mushroom is edible or not. Interestingly, the dark top of the fungus exudes a specific smell, like cat excrement, to attract insects. When insects gnaw at the top of the fungus, it turns orange, and then the entire fruiting body begins to decompose, and after 3-4 days nothing remains of the fungus.

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    Bird's nest (Nidulariaceae) Bird's nest is a fungus belonging to the mold group. The mushroom owes its name to its unusual appearance, resembling a bird's nest with tiny testicles. This form contributes to the favorable spread of spores: under the pressure of rainwater that has fallen into the nest, the fungus spits them out within a radius of a meter from itself, which allows it to occupy more and more new territories for reproduction. The Bird's Nest grows mainly in New Zealand on rotting wood, small twigs of tree ferns, and sometimes on animal excrement.

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    Astringent panellus (Panellus stipticus) Hat 2-4 cm in diameter, reniform, lateral, light brown, finely scaly or finely fluffy, with a hairy, slightly curved thin edge. The plates are narrow, frequent, the same color with a hat or darker. The pulp is thin, leathery, brownish. Leg 0.5-2 cm high, 0.2-0.6 cm wide, eccentric, thickened upwards, solid, of the same color as the hat, pubescent, then smooth. It grows in large groups, growing together with the bases of the legs, on fallen trees and stumps. From April to November. European part of Russia, North Caucasus, Siberia, Primorsky Krai. Inedible.

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    Rhodotus palmatus This mushroom is the only representative of the genus in the Physalacriaceae family. Not very common. It is found throughout the northern hemisphere: in the east of North America, in northern Africa, Europe and Asia. In Europe, it is included in many lists of species that are threatened with extinction. Grows on stumps and decaying wood. The fruit body of mature mushrooms is a characteristic pink color with a mesh pattern on a dense hat. Size, shape and color vary depending on the lighting.

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    Trembling orange (Tremella mesenterica) Consists of smooth, shiny and sinuous blades. In appearance, the blades are watery and shapeless, a bit reminiscent of the intestines. The fruit body is approximately 1-4 cm in height. The color of the fruit body varies from almost white to bright yellow or orange. Due to the large number of spores located on the surface, the fungus appears whitish. The pulp is gelatinous, but at the same time strong, has no smell. Like all Tremblings, Tremella mesenterica tends to dry out, and after rain, it becomes the same again. Occurs from August to the end of autumn. Often the fungus persists in winter, forming fruiting bodies with the onset of spring. Grows on dead branches of deciduous trees. If the conditions are favorable, then it bears fruit very abundantly. It grows both on the plains and on the mountains. In places with a mild climate, the entire mushroom period can bear fruit. The mushroom is edible, although tasteless, and even has some value, but not in our country. Our mushroom pickers have no idea how to collect this mushroom, how to carry it home and how to cook it so that it does not dissolve.

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    Amber-Brown raincoat Brown raincoat (Lycoperdon umbrinum). This type of fungus grows in China, Europe and North America. These mushrooms do not have an open cap with spores. Instead, spores appear inside, in a spherical body. When ripe, the spores form a gleba in the center of the body, which has a characteristic color and texture.

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    Mushroom "earthen asterisk" or starfish (lat. Geastrum). When ripe, this mushroom is shaped like a star with sharp rays down, and in the center there is a small convex ball - its fruiting body, which contains a spore-bearing sac and releases spores into the air. The color of the mushroom "earth star" is not bright, it grows all over the world, and belongs to puffball mushrooms. Indian tribes used it for medicinal purposes, and they also believed that the "earth star" had the ability to predict celestial phenomena.

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    False morel (lat. Gyromitra esculenta). In appearance, this fungus resembles a brain. False morels occur naturally in brown and dark purple. When properly prepared, they are a kind of delicacy. However, raw mushrooms are poisonous, so they require careful heat treatment in cooking. Only a knowledgeable and experienced person should cook them, otherwise a fatal outcome is possible.

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    Bioluminescent mushroom (lat. Mycena Chlorophos). Glow is a hallmark of all bioluminescent mushrooms (71 species of such mushrooms have now been found). Mushrooms of the species Mycena Chlorophos glow yellow-green in the dark, during rains. Such a picture of amazing beauty can be seen in Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Brazil and Puerto Rico.

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    Lattice red (lat. Clathrus ruber). In appearance, it looks more like a fancy flower than a mushroom representative. The mushroom acquires the appearance of a bright red lattice ball from an ovoid fruiting body, which can reach a height of 10 cm. Mature mushrooms have an unpleasant smell of excrement and rotten meat.

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    The Sea Anemone Mushroom (Aseroe rubra) only makes an impression when mature. Young mushrooms of this species will not attract anyone with their whitish nondescript appearance. However, with age, the mushroom cap is divided into 3-4 parts, forming a kind of petals, and it becomes clear why the mushroom is called sea ​​anemone. Interestingly, the brown slime secreted by the fungus has an odor of decaying flesh that attracts insects. The fungus is widely distributed in Australia and on the island of Tasmania.

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    Devil's cigar (Chorioactis geaster). The devil's cigar is one of the rarest mushrooms in the world. This type of fungus has been found in central Texas, in two remote locations in Japan, and in recent times they are found in the mountains of Nara. In shape and color, this mushroom resembles a cigar, for which it received its name. After maturation, the mushroom splits, emitting a low whistle, and releases a small cloud of spores into the air.

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    A rare mushroom listed in the Red Book. Almost all dictiophores live only in tropical countries. These mushrooms grow very fast. For example, according to the descriptions of German scientists, the Brazilian net-sock rises half a meter in two hours, and also glows in the dark with some unearthly, fabulous color. In our literature, the mushroom is known as "the lady under the veil" or "the lady under the veil." A white lace veil-mesh hangs from under the hat, covering the spongy leg.

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    Bowl mushrooms belong to the class of marsupials or ascomycetes (morels related to them, lines). In ascomycetes, fruiting bodies look like goblets, cups or saucers, their inner surface completely covered with bags of spores. In summer, such mushrooms can be found on rotten branches, stumps. In the spring, in very damp places, you can see quite large, bright red mushrooms - sarcoscyphs, you can’t eat such mushrooms, but you can admire their unusual appearance.

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    Mycology is the science of mushrooms (from the Greek "mikos" - mushroom) As a science, it arose at the end of the 19th century, its founder F.M.Kamensky.

    The group of organisms called mushrooms includes up to 100 thousand species, including over 100 edible species. Mushrooms are extremely diverse in size, appearance, and habitats.

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    Mushrooms are a special group of living organisms.

    Mushrooms - special group living beings, which does not apply to either plants or animals Mushroom cells do not contain chloroplasts Mushrooms feed on ready-made organic substances Mushrooms do not move Mushrooms live in various environments: in the soil and on its surface, in the body of animals and humans.

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    Variety of mushrooms

    We often meet mushrooms: mold - mushrooms, an apple has gone bad - this is the work of mushrooms. Unicellular fungi are invisible, invisible to the human eye. Multicellular fungi are clearly visible. Powdery mildew Scab Yeast

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    edible mushrooms

    Mushrooms Aspen mushrooms Honey agaric Camelina Boletus Russula Porcini mushroom Butterdish Chanterelles

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    It grows more often in oak forests, pine forests and spruce forests Harvested from July to October (even after the first frosts) Boletus mushroom

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    Often found both singly and in groups in deciduous, as well as in mixed forests Harvested from mid-June to October Boletus

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    Oiler It usually grows in large groups in light pine forests, in young pine forests, on forest edges and in places well lit by the sun.

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    Volnushka Occurs in damp places, in deciduous and mixed forests, in forest dry meadows, along roadsides Harvested in August - September

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    Boletus Grows in birch or mixed with birch forests throughout the forest zone. It is found in glades, forest edges and hillocks. This mushroom appears from the end of May and grows until late autumn.

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    Chanterelles Occur in light coniferous or lightly grassy forests, most often in families Gathered from June to October

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    Ryzhik Occurs mainly in colonies in pine forests. Prefers to settle on sandy soils. Harvested from late July to October

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    Honey mushrooms Grows in forest glades, along the edges of the forest, in ravines and ditches. It is found among the grass, in meadows, along roads. It begins to bear fruit in late May and before the start of frost.

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    Memo to the mushroom picker.

    To collect mushrooms, you have to get up earlier. I found a mushroom, do not rush to pull it out “by the roots”, it is better to cut it with a knife. Can't be thrown forest floor- you will destroy the mycelium. Do not collect old and wormy ones - they may contain poison. Do not pick mushrooms in vain: many animals feed on them.

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    poisonous mushrooms

    Fly agaric porphyry Gall mushroom False mushrooms Pale grebe Amanita muscaria red Amanita stinky

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    Very beautiful because of the large number of white flakes on the hat. fly agaric poisonous mushrooms

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    Pale toadstool It is often confused with champignon Satanic mushroom In appearance it resembles an oak tree, but the flesh at the break first turns red and then turns blue. poisonous mushrooms

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    False honey agaric Grows in groups on the stumps of deciduous trees and near them in August - September, rarely in July. Gall fungus Occurs from early August to early autumn in various types forests, preferring conifers. Settles both on the soil and on decaying wood. poisonous mushrooms

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    MINISTRY OF HEALTH WARNING

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    Don't pick mushrooms you don't know. Don't taste the mushrooms! Don't buy stemless mushrooms. It is they who can show what kind of mushroom it is.

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    Do not take overgrown mushrooms, such mushrooms contain more toxic substances. Avoid buying mushrooms in places of unauthorized trade.

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    Do not pick mushrooms along roads or in industrial areas Do not pick mushrooms in very hot weather, because of the heat, more than half of the edible mushrooms become poisonous. It is not recommended to eat mushrooms for children under 7 years of age, as well as for the elderly and with chronic diseases of the gastrointestinal tract. Be careful with such edible mushrooms as russula, volnushki, nigella. They must be soaked for 1.5-2 hours, or even more.