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Mushroom Observer Image 171564: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Fornæs
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Hvilsager
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Mushroom Observer Image 171565: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Castel Fusano, Lazio, Italy
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Mols Bjerge, Denmark
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Hvilsager
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Mushroom Observer Image 174608: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Lycoperdon perlatum Pers.Common Puffball, DE: FlaschenstublingSlo.: betiasta pranicaDat.: Oct. 2. 2013Lat.: 46.36063 Long.: 13.70362Code: Bot_755/2013_DSC8218Habitat: Right on the path between two village houses; surrounded with abandoned pastures and mixed wood; almost flat, semiruderal, calcareous terrain; in shade, relatively moist place; exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: rather skeletal soil with raw humus (mostly rotten leaves of Fagus sylvatica)Place: Lower Trenta valley, between villages Soa and Trenta, right bank of river Soa, between farmhouse Trenta 2 and cottage Trenta 2b, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC.Comments: Lycoperdon perlatum is our most common puffball, growing in very wide range of habitats and on all kind of soils. Yet it is very beautiful (if not too mature). It is easy to recognize it by its interesting fruitbody surface, which is covered by 1 to 2 mm high, conical (or sometimes of quite funny shape) warts, which are surrounded by a ring of lower warts around them. With time the large warts fall off and the lower ones appear like a kind of delicate. regular 'net' on the surface of the fruit bodies, which is typical for the species. Photographed fungi were growing in a group of more than ten fruit bodies growing right in the middle of a mountain path.Spores warty. Dimensions: 3,5 [3,8 ; 3,9] 4,2 x 3,3 [3,6 ; 3,8] 4,1 microns; Q = 1 [1,0] 1,1; N = 40; C = 95%; Me = 3,8 x 3,7 microns; Qe = 1. Capillitium hyphae diameter about 4-5 microns; not septated, very sparsely branched. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water; in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera.Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJFRef.:(1) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 432. (2) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 1089. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2., Verlag Mykologia (1986), p 399. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 2., Ulmer (2000), p 151. (5) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 330.
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Bramslev bakker ved Mariager Fjord, Jylland, Danmark
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Mushroom Observer Image 174609: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Lycoperdon perlatum Pers.Common Puffball, DE: FlaschenstublingSlo.: betiasta pranicaDat.: Oct. 2. 2013Lat.: 46.36063 Long.: 13.70362Code: Bot_755/2013_DSC8218Habitat: Right on the path between two village houses; surrounded with abandoned pastures and mixed wood; almost flat, semiruderal, calcareous terrain; in shade, relatively moist place; exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: rather skeletal soil with raw humus (mostly rotten leaves of Fagus sylvatica)Place: Lower Trenta valley, between villages Soa and Trenta, right bank of river Soa, between farmhouse Trenta 2 and cottage Trenta 2b, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC.Comments: Lycoperdon perlatum is our most common puffball, growing in very wide range of habitats and on all kind of soils. Yet it is very beautiful (if not too mature). It is easy to recognize it by its interesting fruitbody surface, which is covered by 1 to 2 mm high, conical (or sometimes of quite funny shape) warts, which are surrounded by a ring of lower warts around them. With time the large warts fall off and the lower ones appear like a kind of delicate. regular 'net' on the surface of the fruit bodies, which is typical for the species. Photographed fungi were growing in a group of more than ten fruit bodies growing right in the middle of a mountain path.Spores warty. Dimensions: 3,5 [3,8 ; 3,9] 4,2 x 3,3 [3,6 ; 3,8] 4,1 microns; Q = 1 [1,0] 1,1; N = 40; C = 95%; Me = 3,8 x 3,7 microns; Qe = 1. Capillitium hyphae diameter about 4-5 microns; not septated, very sparsely branched. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water; in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera.Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJFRef.:(1) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 432. (2) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 1089. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2., Verlag Mykologia (1986), p 399. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 2., Ulmer (2000), p 151. (5) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 330.
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Bramslev bakker ved Mariager Fjord, Jylland, Danmark
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Mushroom Observer Image 174610: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Gelenau/erzgebirge, Saxony, Germany
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Bramslev bakker ved Mariager Fjord, Danmark
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Mushroom Observer Image 177670: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Lycoperdon perlatum Pers.Common Puffball, DE: FlaschenstublingSlo.: betiasta pranicaDat.: Oct. 2. 2013Lat.: 46.36063 Long.: 13.70362Code: Bot_755/2013_DSC8218Habitat: Right on the path between two village houses; surrounded with abandoned pastures and mixed wood; almost flat, semiruderal, calcareous terrain; in shade, relatively moist place; exposed to direct rain; average precipitations ~ 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 7-9 deg C, elevation 595 m (1.950 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.Substratum: rather skeletal soil with raw humus (mostly rotten leaves of Fagus sylvatica)Place: Lower Trenta valley, between villages Soa and Trenta, right bank of river Soa, between farmhouse Trenta 2 and cottage Trenta 2b, East Julian Alps, Posoje, Slovenia EC.Comments: Lycoperdon perlatum is our most common puffball, growing in very wide range of habitats and on all kind of soils. Yet it is very beautiful (if not too mature). It is easy to recognize it by its interesting fruitbody surface, which is covered by 1 to 2 mm high, conical (or sometimes of quite funny shape) warts, which are surrounded by a ring of lower warts around them. With time the large warts fall off and the lower ones appear like a kind of delicate. regular 'net' on the surface of the fruit bodies, which is typical for the species. Photographed fungi were growing in a group of more than ten fruit bodies growing right in the middle of a mountain path.Spores warty. Dimensions: 3,5 [3,8 ; 3,9] 4,2 x 3,3 [3,6 ; 3,8] 4,1 microns; Q = 1 [1,0] 1,1; N = 40; C = 95%; Me = 3,8 x 3,7 microns; Qe = 1. Capillitium hyphae diameter about 4-5 microns; not septated, very sparsely branched. Olympus CH20, NEA 100x/1.25, magnification 1.000 x, oil, in water; in vivo. AmScope MA500 digital camera.Herbarium: Mycotheca and lichen herbarium (LJU-Li) of Slovenian Forestry Institute, Vena pot 2, Ljubljana, Index Herbariorum LJFRef.:(1) S. Buczacki, Collins Fungi Guide, Collins (2012), p 432. (2) R.M. Daehncke, 1200 Pilze in Farbfotos, AT Verlag (2009), p 1089. (3) J. Breitenbach, F. Kraenzlin, Eds., Fungi of Switzerland, Vol.2., Verlag Mykologia (1986), p 399. (4) G.J. Krieglsteiner (Hrsg.), Die Grosspilze Baden-Wrttembergs, Band 2., Ulmer (2000), p 151. (5) R. Phillips, Mushrooms, Macmillan (2006), p 330.
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Grønne Strand ved Fjerritslev, Jylland, Danmark
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Mushroom Observer Image 205850: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.
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Castel Fusano, Lazio, Italy
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Hannerup Plantage ved Hobro
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Mushroom Observer Image 205851: Lycoperdon pyriforme Schaeff.