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  2. Peziza phyllogena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peziza_phyllogena

    Peziza phyllogena, commonly known as the common brown cup or the pig-ear cup, is a species of fungus in the family Pezizaceae. A saprobic species, the fungus produces brownish, cup-shaped fruit bodies that grow singly or in clusters on either soil or well-rotted wood. It is found in Europe, North America, and Iceland, where it fruits in the spring.

  3. Wood-decay fungus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood-decay_fungus

    Wood decay fungus growing on rotting wood. Soft-rot fungi secrete cellulase from their hyphae, an enzyme that breaks down cellulose in wood. [4] This leads to the formation of microscopic cavities inside the wood and, sometimes, to a discoloration and cracking-pattern, similar to brown rot.

  4. Spinellus fusiger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinellus_fusiger

    Spinellus fusiger, commonly known as bonnet mold, [1] is a species of fungus in the phylum Mucoromycota.It is a pin mold that is characterized by erect sporangiophores (specialized hyphae that bear a sporangium) that are simple in structure, brown or yellowish-brown in color, and with branched aerial filaments that bear the zygospores.

  5. Gyromitra esculenta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyromitra_esculenta

    However, the fungus is now widely recognized as potentially deadly. [29] Gyromitra esculenta contains levels of the poison gyromitrin that vary locally among populations; although these mushrooms are only rarely involved in poisonings in either North America or western Europe, intoxications are seen frequently in eastern Europe and Scandinavia ...

  6. Peziza varia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peziza_varia

    Palamino Cup fungus in Kilmarnock, Ayrshire.. Peziza varia can be identified by its growth on rotted wood or wood chips, its brown upper surface (at maturity) that is usually somewhat wrinkled near the center; a whitish and minutely fuzzy under surface; a round, cuplike shape when young, and a flattened-irregular shape when mature; attachment to the wood under the center of the mushroom ...

  7. Coniophora puteana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coniophora_puteana

    Contrary to most brown rot fungi C. puteana behaves more like a white-rot fungi in the way it decays, such as the thinning of the cell walls and leaving cavities within the substrate. Unlike other common wet rot fungi, C. puteana is a fungus that requires high humidity averaging around 50

  8. Torula herbarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torula_herbarum

    Torula herbarum is a darkly-pigmented filamentous fungus in the phylum Ascomycota. [1] It is often included in the unrelated but morphologically similar group of fungi known as sooty molds . [ 2 ] It was first described by mycologist Christiaan Hendrik Persoon in the genus Monilinia based on similarity to the agent of brown rot of stone fruit ...

  9. Mold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mold

    Close up of mold on a strawberry Penicillium mold growing on a clementine. A mold (US, PH) or mould (UK, CW) is one of the structures that certain fungi can form. The dust-like, colored appearance of molds is due to the formation of spores containing fungal secondary metabolites. The spores are the dispersal units of the fungi.