Physalacriaceae

🔍 How to identify Physalacriaceae →
Fungi Basidiomycota Agaricomycetes Agaricales Physalacriaceae
Armillaria mellea (Vahl) P.Kumm.

Armillaria mellea (Vahl) P.Kumm.

Armillaria mellea (Vahl) P.Kumm.

Armillaria mellea is a common parasitic honey-coloured fungus that is cultivated and consumed as edible, with some potential dietary benefits.

Armillaria gallica Marxm. & Romagn.

Armillaria gallica Marxm. & Romagn.

Armillaria gallica Marxm. & Romagn.

Armillaria gallica is a widely distributed fungus with specific morphological traits, life cycle, and ecological roles.

Armillaria sinapina Bérubé & Dessur.

Armillaria sinapina Bérubé & Dessur.

Armillaria sinapina Bérubé & Dessur.

Armillaria sinapina is a bioluminescent pathogenic fungus that causes Armillaria root disease on trees in Alaska.

Armillaria nabsnona T.J.Volk & Burds.

Armillaria nabsnona T.J.Volk & Burds.

Armillaria nabsnona T.J.Volk & Burds.

Armillaria nabsnona is a bioluminescent fungus found in North America, Hawaii, and Japan, with a distinctive basidia branching pattern.

Armillaria ostoyae (Romagn.) Herink

Armillaria ostoyae (Romagn.) Herink

Armillaria ostoyae (Romagn.) Herink

Armillaria ostoyae is a pathogenic edible fungus famous for including one of the world's largest and oldest known single organisms.

Armillaria borealis Marxm. & Korhonen

Armillaria borealis Marxm. & Korhonen

Armillaria borealis Marxm. & Korhonen

Armillaria borealis is a mushroom in Physalacriaceae, closely related to A. solidipes and A. gemina.

Armillaria luteobubalina Watling & Kile

Armillaria luteobubalina Watling & Kile

Armillaria luteobubalina Watling & Kile

Armillaria luteobubalina is a pathogenic honey fungus found in Australia and southern South America, and it is edible after cooking.

Armillaria solidipes Peck

Armillaria solidipes Peck

Armillaria solidipes Peck

Armillaria solidipes Peck (A. ostoyae) is a parasitic edible fungus famous for including one of the world's largest single organisms.

Armillaria hinnulea Kile & Watling

Armillaria hinnulea Kile & Watling

Armillaria hinnulea Kile & Watling

Armillaria hinnulea is a rare mushroom found in Australia and New Zealand, a secondary pathogen in Australian wet sclerophyll forests.

Armillaria limonea (G.Stev.) Boesew.

Armillaria limonea (G.Stev.) Boesew.

Armillaria limonea (G.Stev.) Boesew.

Armillaria limonea is an endemic New Zealand fungus that can sometimes have a bioluminescent pileus.

Armillaria novae-zelandiae (G.Stev.) Boesew.

Armillaria novae-zelandiae (G.Stev.) Boesew.

Armillaria novae-zelandiae (G.Stev.) Boesew.

Armillaria novae-zelandiae is a sometimes bioluminescent fungus distributed across multiple regions with specific environmental preferences.

Armillaria puiggarii Speg.

Armillaria puiggarii Speg.

Armillaria puiggarii Speg.

Armillaria puiggarii is an agaric fungus in the Physalacriaceae family found in Central and South America.

Armillaria cepistipes Velen.

Armillaria cepistipes Velen.

Armillaria cepistipes Velen.

Armillaria cepistipes Velen. is a weakly pathogenic, bioluminescent wood-rotting mushroom found in Central European forests.

Mucidula mucida (Schrad.) Pat.

Mucidula mucida (Schrad.) Pat.

Mucidula mucida (Schrad.) Pat.

Mucidula mucida, the porcelain mushroom, is a common European fungus mostly associated with dead or living beech trees.

Protoxerula flavo-olivacea (R.H.Petersen & Halling) R.H.Petersen

Protoxerula flavo-olivacea (R.H.Petersen & Halling) R.H.Petersen

Protoxerula flavo-olivacea (R.H.Petersen & Halling) R.H.Petersen

Protoxerula is a monotypic fungal genus containing the single Australian species Protoxerula flavo-olivacea.

Hymenopellis furfuracea (Peck) R.H.Petersen

Hymenopellis furfuracea (Peck) R.H.Petersen

Hymenopellis furfuracea (Peck) R.H.Petersen

Hymenopellis furfuracea is a North American mushroom that grows from dead hardwood tree wood, with whitish flesh and a white spore print.

Oudemansiella canarii (Jungh.) Höhn.

Oudemansiella canarii (Jungh.) Höhn.

Oudemansiella canarii (Jungh.) Höhn.

Oudemansiella canarii is a saprobic white mushroom that grows on decaying wood, found mainly in tropical regions of the Americas and northern Australia.

Oudemansiella australis G.Stev. & G.M.Taylor

Oudemansiella australis G.Stev. & G.M.Taylor

Oudemansiella australis G.Stev. & G.M.Taylor

Oudemansiella australis is a mushroom that grows on rotting wood, found in New Zealand, Australia, and Papua New Guinea.

Hymenopellis radicata (Relhan) R.H.Petersen

Hymenopellis radicata (Relhan) R.H.Petersen

Hymenopellis radicata (Relhan) R.H.Petersen

Hymenopellis radicata is a mushroom with a deeply rooting stem, and its caps are reportedly edible.

Flammulina velutipes (Curtis) Singer

Flammulina velutipes (Curtis) Singer

Flammulina velutipes (Curtis) Singer

Flammulina velutipes, or velvet shank, is an edible saprotrophic fungus found in Europe and North America that grows on hardwoods.

Flammulina populicola Redhead & R.H.Petersen

Flammulina populicola Redhead & R.H.Petersen

Flammulina populicola Redhead & R.H.Petersen

Flammulina populicola is an edible winter mushroom found mainly in northern Europe and North America that grows on poplar wood.

Strobilurus trullisatus (Murrill) Lennox

Strobilurus trullisatus (Murrill) Lennox

Strobilurus trullisatus (Murrill) Lennox

Strobilurus trullisatus is a small mushroom that grows clustered on Douglas-fir cones, with a white cap and white spore print.

Strobilurus tenacellus (Pers.) Singer

Strobilurus tenacellus (Pers.) Singer

Strobilurus tenacellus (Pers.) Singer

Strobilurus tenacellus is a small saprobic fungus that grows on conifer cones in Europe and Asia.

Strobilurus conigenoides (Ellis) Singer

Strobilurus conigenoides (Ellis) Singer

Strobilurus conigenoides (Ellis) Singer

Strobilurus conigenoides is a small fungus usually associated with Magnolia cones, though it has also been found on American sweetgum fruits.

Related Families

Start Exploring Nature Today

Download iNature for free. 10 identifications on us. No account needed. No credit card required.

Download Free on App Store