OMPHALIN
V
ISSN 1925-1858
Some Common
Edible Mushrooms Photo: Andrus Voitk
Photo: Henry Mann
Greening Orange Milk-Cap
Agaricus campestris
Lactarius deterrimus
Orange Milk-Cap
Lactarius thyinos
Photo: Michael Burzynski
Meadow Mushroom
Photo: Andrus Voitk
of Newfoundland and Labrador
Boletus edulis
Slippery Jack
Suillus luteus
Common Puffball
Lycoperdon perlatum
Photo: Jim Cornish
Pear-shaped Puffball
Lycoperdon pyriforme
Sweet Tooth
Hydnum umbilicatum
Yellow Legs
Craterellus tubaeformis
Cantharellus roseocanus
Lobster Mushroom
Hypomyces lactifluorum
Photo: Henry Mann
Hedgehog
Hydnum repandum
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Newfoundland Chanterelle
Photo: Henry Mann
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Coprinus comatus
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Photo: Henry Mann
Photo: Jim Cornish
Shaggy Mane
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Insert: Michael Burzynski
King Bolete
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Morchella sp. nov.
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Black Morel
Insert: Michael Burzynski
Russula peckii
Pine Mushroom
Tricholoma magnivelare
Honey Mushroom
Armillaria ostoyae
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Photo: Andrus Voitk
Photo: Jim Cornish
Photo: Faye Murrin
Insert: Diane Pelley
Peck’s Russula
Birch Bolete
Leccinum scabrum
The Big Cat
Catathelasma ventricosa
More than 1,500 species of fungi have been identified and catalogued by Foray Newfoundland and Labrador. Some are delicious mushrooms, some are inedible, and some are deadly poisonous—and it is not always easy to tell them apart. Never eat a wild mushroom unless you are absolutely sure of its identity.
Newsletter of
Vol. V, No 8 Aug 30, 2014
OMPHALINA
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