The mushrooms












    

Grifola umbellata.   Click a photo to enlarge it.   back to list

synonyms: Eichhase, Polypore en ombelle
Grifola umbellata Mushroom
Ref No: 7815
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location: North America, Europe
edibility: Edible
fungus colour: Brown, Grey to beige
normal size: over 15cm
cap type: Other
stem type: Lateral, rudimentary or absent
spore colour: White, cream or yellowish
habitat: Grows in woods, Grows on the ground, Grows on wood

Grifola umbellata (Pers. ex Fr.) syn. Polyporus umbellatus Pers. ex Fr. Eichhase Polypore en ombelle. Fruit Body up to 50cm in diameter consisting of a thick fleshy base from which repeated branching occurs, the ultimate branchlets ending in small umbrella-like caps, each 1–4cm across and centrally depressed with a thin, wavy margin, covered in fibrils or small fibrous scales, initially grey-brown becoming ochraceous with age. Stem thin, flushed with cap colour, merging at the bottom into the common trunk-like base. Flesh thin in cap, white. Taste pleasant but with acrid aftertaste, smell pleasant when fresh. Tubes 1–1.5mm long, decurrent on to the stem, straw-yellow. Pores 1 per mm, angular, whitish to straw-yellow. Spores cylindric-ellipsoid, 7–10 x 3–4um. Habitat on the ground arising from a subterranean sclerotium associated with roots of deciduous trees, especially oak. Season
summer to autumn. Very rare. Edible. Distribution, America and Europe.

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