A Polyporus sp. Viewed from underneath to highlight the spore tubes. |
Photo Cred: By Otto Miettinen (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Blastic Conidiogenesis of Trichoderma harzianum |
Muriform conidia of Rhizocarpon subgeminatum |
Goodbye Mr. |
Gyromitra infula |
Mushroom growing on other
mushrooms or the decayed remains of other mushrooms.
|
1.
|
Mushroom not growing on other
mushrooms.
|
2
|
2.
|
Mushroom with gills on its
underside.
|
3
|
2.
|
Gills absent.
|
5
|
3.
|
Growing shelflike on wood (or, if not, then gills concentric
rather than radial); mushroom very tough and leathery, corky, or woody
(try tearing it in half); gills tough and hard, sometimes maze-like; cap
frequently (but not always) with concentric zones of color.
|
3.
|
Not completely as above.
|
4
|
4.
|
Gills running down the stem, not platelike and thus not
easily separable from the cap and stem (try removing an entire
"gill" with your fingers or a sharp object); mushroom usually not
growing on wood.
|
4.
|
Gills not as above; mushroom growing on wood or elsewhere.
|
5.
|
Mushroom with pores on its
underside (they may be very tiny; use a hand lens if unsure).
|
6
|
5.
|
Pores absent.
|
9
|
6.
|
Stem absent--or, if present, lateral.
|
6.
|
Stem present and central.
|
7
|
7.
|
Flesh in stem tough.
|
7.
|
Flesh in stem soft.
|
8
|
8.
|
Cap round in outline; pore surface not running down the
stem, or only slightly running down the stem; spore print not
white.
|
8.
|
Cap round to irregular in outline; pore surface running
down the stem; spore print white.
|
9.
|
Mushroom with spines or "teeth"--either on the
underside of a cap, or hanging from a branched structure, or clumped together
in an indistinct mass.
|
9.
|
Spines or teeth absent.
|
10
|
10.
|
Mushroom covered in some part with a foul-smelling slime;
arising from a soft underground "egg"; variously shaped (like a
club or stick, like crab claws, like a lantern, like a Wiffle ball, etc.);
frequently found in urban settings, but also found in woods.
|
10.
|
Not as above.
|
11
|
11.
|
Mushroom shaped like a cup, a saucer, a goblet, a standing
rabbit ear, a bowl, (etc.), with or without a stem.
|
12
|
11.
|
Mushroom not shaped as above.
|
13
|
12.
|
Goblet or cup with tiny "eggs" inside; mushroom
very small.
|
12.
|
Eggs absent; mushroom variously sized.
|
13.
|
Mushroom more or less shaped like a ball, or like a ball
raised up on a stem, or like a ball set on a starfish.
|
13.
|
Not as above.
|
14
|
14.
|
Mushroom with a
clearly defined, more or less central stem that is separate from a clearly
defined cap.
|
15
|
14.
|
Mushroom without a clearly defined cap and stem.
|
19
|
15.
|
Cap shape convex to centrally depressed or vase-shaped;
undersurface smooth, wrinkled, or gill-like; rarely fruiting in spring except
in warm coastal areas.
|
15.
|
Cap shape oval, pointed, lobed,
saddle-shaped, irregular, or thimble-like (never vase-shaped or convex);
undersurface absent, or hard to see or define; many (but definitely not all)
species fruiting in spring.
|
16
|
16.
|
Stem completely hollow, or hollow with cottony fibers
inside; cap with pits and ridges, or longitudinally wrinkled, or fairly
smooth (never lobed or convoluted); without reddish or reddish brown shades;
found in spring.
|
16.
|
Not completely as
above.
|
17
|
17.
|
Most (but not all) species found in spring (in
north-temperature regions); cap lobed, convoluted, "brainlike," or
irregular, with brownish or reddish brown to reddish shades (never black,
white, or gray when fresh).
|
17.
|
Not completely as above.
|
18
|
18.
|
Found in summer and fall (or spring
in warm coastal areas); cap lobed, saddle-shaped, or irregular and whitish,
grayish, brownish, or black; stem surface ribbed or "pocketed" in
some species.
|
1.
|
Cap cuplike; with or without a stem. (Not treated below;
the cuplike species of Helvella are treated in the key to the cup fungi.)
|
1.
|
Cap not cuplike.
|
2
|
|