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The mushrooms of the Hydnum group grow both on ground and on wood.
The name comes the Greek hydnum meaning spongy plant or fungus.
Most Hydnum are safe to eat.
Since they cannot be cultivated, species belonging to the Hydnum genus are collected from natural ecosystems in large quantities.
The type species is Mycorrhaphium adustum (formerly referred to Hydnum).
"This is one of the reasons why many authors of studies have believed that there are few Hydnum species with different variables," outlines the scientist.
P. nigrum was originally described by Elias Fries in 1815 as a species of Hydnum.
In North America, the related Hydnum umbilicatum is also commercially collected, sometimes under the name "sweet tooth".
A basidiomycete fungus of the family Hydnaceae, it is the type species of the genus Hydnum.
Hydnum umbilicatum, commonly known as the depressed hedgehog, is a species of tooth fungus in the family Hydnaceae.
Hydnum ellisianum Thüm.
Hairy deerhorn, gastrodia tuber, muskiness, and hedgehog hydnum, etc. are special products of the area.
Hydnum rufescens, commonly known as the terracotta hedgehog, is an edible basidiomycete of the family Hydnaceae.
Species of Tricholoma, Suillus, Amphinema, and Hydnum failed to form mycorrhizae.
It was originally described as a species of Hydnum by Italian mycologist Giacomo Bresadola in 1902.
It was first described as a species of Hydnum by Miles Berkeley and Moses Ashley Curtis in 1849.
Found in Australia, it was first described in 1925 by Curtis Gates Lloyd as a species of Hydnum.
Species of Hydnum and the related Sistotrema confluens (Cantharellales) are also mycorrhizal, but have different ecological requirements.
Two new species of Hydnum with ovoid basidiospores: H. ovoideisporum and H. vesterholtii.
Hydnum repandum (the hedgehog fungus) is an edible species, commercially collected in some countries and often marketed under the French name pied de mouton.
It was described as new to science in 1961 by mycologist Kenneth A. Harrison, who initially called it Hydnum lanuginosum.
With increasing use of the microscope, it became clear that not all tooth fungi were closely related and most Hydnum species were gradually moved to other genera.
Hydnellum auratile was first described as a species of Hydnum by German mycologist Max Britzelmayr in 1891.
In the strict, modern sense, the Hydnaceae are limited to the genus Hydnum and related genera, with basidiocarps having a toothed or poroid hymenium.
Hydnellum conigenum, commonly known as the funnel hydnum, is a species of tooth fungus in the family Bankeraceae found in North America.