Among The Mushrooms: A Guide For Beginners
Caroline A. Burgin
10 chapters
2 hour read
Selected Chapters
10 chapters
A GUIDE FOR BEGINNERS
A GUIDE FOR BEGINNERS
Drexel Biddle / Fructu non Foliis “ Have you not seen in the woods on a late autumn morning a poor fungus or mushroom—a plant without any solidity, nay, that seemed nothing but a soft mush or jelly—by its constant total and inconceivably gentle pushing, manage to break its way up through the frosty ground, and actually to lift a hard crust on its head? It is the symbol of the power of kindness. ” Emerson....
42 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
PREFACE.
PREFACE.
The books which have been consulted in the preparation of this work are, “British Fungi,” by Rev. John Stevenson; “British Fungus-Flora,” by George Massee; “Mushrooms and their Uses,” and “Boleti of the United States,” by Professor Charles H. Peck, State Botanist of New York; “Moulds, Mildew and Mushrooms,” by Professor L. M. Underwood; and a pamphlet by Mr. C. G. Lloyd, entitled “The Volvæ of the United States.” No attempt has been made to do more than to put in popular language the statements
46 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
INTRODUCTION.
INTRODUCTION.
This book is intended for those who, though ignorant on the subject, desire to know something about mushrooms. The first question which such an one asks upon finding a mushroom is, “What is its name?” If there is no one near to tell him, then follows the second inquiry, “How can I find it out for myself?” If wild flowers were concerned, Gray’s little book, “How the Plants Grow,” could be used; and there is also Mrs. Dana’s book on “The Wild Flowers,” that has given so much pleasure. In the case
8 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
MUSHROOMS.
MUSHROOMS.
Fungi have existed from early geological ages. They flourished in the Carboniferous period, when the enormous beds of coal were formed, a space of time that occupied many millions of years. Bessey says that the oldest known member of the order of membrane fungi, Hymenomycetes, was called by the name of “Polyporites Bowmanii.” During the Tertiary period members of the genera now known under the names of Lenzites, Polyporus, and Hydnum were all in existence. It is interesting to know that even bef
13 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
CLASSIFICATION OF FUNGI.
CLASSIFICATION OF FUNGI.
The color of both gills and tubes is an important feature in the classification of fungi. We have now arrived at a point where the amateur may become wearied at the reading of long names and the enumeration of classes and genera. Stevenson has said in his preface to his work on British Fungi that “there is no royal road to the knowledge of fungi,” and if we become enough interested to pursue the subject we will probably discover it at this point. We will try and make this part as simple as possi
27 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
DESCRIPTIONS OF FUNGI, ARRANGED ACCORDING TO COLOR OF CAP ONLY.
DESCRIPTIONS OF FUNGI, ARRANGED ACCORDING TO COLOR OF CAP ONLY.
Cap whitish-violet, 2 to 3 inches broad, fleshy, convex, broadly umbonate or gibbous, dry, beautifully silky and becoming even; flesh juicy, a bluish-white color. Stem 2 to 4 inches long, solid, firm, bulbous, club-shaped, ½ to 1 inch thick. It is, both outside and inside, of a whitish violet color, often fibrillose above, with the cortina, and sometimes with the white veil, in the form of a zone at the middle. Gills adnate, 2 to 3 lines broad, somewhat distant, slightly serrulated, of a peculia
47 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
DESCRIPTIONS OF SOME FAMILIAR MUSHROOMS WITHOUT REGARD TO COLOR.
DESCRIPTIONS OF SOME FAMILIAR MUSHROOMS WITHOUT REGARD TO COLOR.
Here follows a list of fungi that we constantly see, but which cannot be classified by the color of the cap. This species grows on trees, oaks or chestnuts, in hot weather. Cap is of a dark-red color, which probably suggested the name. It is generally 2 to 6 inches broad, but often grows to an immense size. The surface is rough, the flesh thick, viscid above, soft when young, when old tough, covered with tenacious fibres. Stem short and thick. Pores at first pallid or yellowish-pink when young;
13 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
DIRECTIONS FOR USING KEYS.
DIRECTIONS FOR USING KEYS.
Let us suppose that the beginner finds a mushroom and wishes to name it. He has learned its component parts. He has remarked the names of the classes into which mushrooms are divided. How then shall he make use of the Keys? We will imagine that he has found a Cantharellus. The cap is yellow color, so let him turn to the list of fungi described under the section “Yellow and Orange,” and see if it agrees in appearance with anyone of these. (It is necessary before consulting a key to find the color
11 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
GLOSSARY.
GLOSSARY.
Acute´. Gills when called acute have sharp edges or are pointed at either end. Adnate´. Spoken of gills when they are firmly attached to the stem. Adnex´. A less degree of attachment of gills than adnate. A´garic. A mushroom that bears gills. Aluta´ceous. A light leather color. Anas´tomosing. Interlacing of veins, spoken of gills that are united by cross veins or partitions. An´nulus. The ring on the stem of a mushroom, formed by the separation of the veil from the margin of the cap. A´pex. The
12 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
NOTE.
NOTE.
In using this table the student should first ascertain the color of the spores of the specimen under investigation. This will determine the particular table to be applied to its further examination. If, for instance, he finds its spores to be white, he will know that Table I. is the one to be consulted. Turning to that table, he should recall the place of its growth, its habitat. Now, suppose it to have been found growing on a stump, he will, by looking at the first column, Habitat, of Table I.,
2 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter