Top 20 Most Common Mushrooms in Salamanca
In the verdant heart of Salamanca, lies a world alive with a vast early spring spectacle - an immense variety of mushrooms. Renowned for its distinct temperate climate and rich organic soils, Salamanca crafts an ideal landscape for the thriving fungi kingdom. From caps of subtle beige to stems with striking hues, Salamanca houses the 20 most common mushroom species - a testament to its biodiversity. Indulge in the knowledge of these ubiquitous fungal flavors that signify Salamanca’s unique blend of nature’s bounty and beauty.
Most Common Mushrooms
1. Fly agaric
In Northern Asia and Europe, fly agaric grows under trees near the winter solstice and is collected for ritual use tied to the season. Its characteristic shape and coloring are still ubiquitous in many European fairy tale illustrations and Christmas traditions. It is highly toxic.
2. Common orange lichen
Common orange lichen was selected in 2006 by the United States Department of Energy as a model for genomic sequencing. Its widespread dispersal and bright yellow-orange color give the lichen its common name. It is primarily found growing on rocks, walls, and tree bark.
3. Oakmoss
Evernia prunastri grows shrubby on trees. The yellow-green lichen grows up to 10 cm. It consists of up to five millimeters wide shrubby branched bands with a light underside. At the edges of these open dusty (Sorale). Apothecias (with shiny brown disc) are rarely formed.
4. Blistered navel lichen
The foliose and umbilical thallus (attached by a single central crampon, the umbilicus), 3-6 (15) cm in diameter, is gray-brown to blackish-brown in dry weather, olive-green when it rained. Its upper surface is covered with convex pustules and bunches of brown-black coral isidia, the central part being covered with a white bloom. The pustules corresponding to propagules: the migration of these pustules from the center to the periphery gives rise to marginal isidies which ensure the vegetative reproduction of the thallus.
5. Parasol
Found in clearings and grassy areas in late summer, the wild parasol mushroom has a snakeskin-patterned stem. The brown spots on its cap make it look a bit shaggy, but that name is reserved for its poisonous counterpart, the Shaggy Parasol (Chlorophyllum rhacodes). You can distinguish the two by the stems: the latter has a smooth stem and red flesh inside.
6. Peniophorella praetermissa
7. Hairy curtain crust
This clustered, overlapping fungus is found all over the world, and is considered native across both the northern and southern hemispheres. Both its common name, hairy curtain crust, and its scientific name, Stereum hirsutum, aptly describe its most obvious features: it is quite tough (stereum) and the younger fruitbodies are notably hairy (hirsutum).
8. Tree lungwort
Tree lungwort is a green lichen that can be found in humid areas of North America, Europe, and Asia. It grows regularly on trees, rocks, and in urban areas rich with moss. It can be used as a dye. Animals may consume tree lungwort or use it as nesting material.
9. Blusher
The blusher mushroom is so named because it “blushes” to a pinkish red color when cut or bruised. It is found in many countries around the world, although it may not be native to the southern hemisphere. It contains a hemolytic toxin that can cause anemia if eaten.
10. Split gill
Split gill(Schizophyllum commune) can be found across the globe. Uniquely, it is the only mushroom species known to display the capability to retract by movement. It is considered inedible, although not necessarily toxic. Furthermore, it is not recommended to smell this species, as the spores are capable of sprouting and growing in nasal passages.
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