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From gastrula to pluteus stages the skeleton grows in both size and complexity.
Pluteus nigroviridis is a medicinal mushroom in the Pluteaceae family.
Pluteus cervinus is the best known species in Europe and North America.
Paul Kummer transferred it to the genus Pluteus in 1871.
Pluteus phaeocyanopus is an agaric fungus in the family Pluteaceae.
The same characters and the presence of a volva separate Volvopluteus from Pluteus.
Pluteus salicinus is a widely distributed psychedelic mushroom that grows on wood.
The skeleton of the pluteus does, however, give rise to the spines of he juvenile sea urchin.
The larvae are planktonic and are known as pluteus larvae.
How she had suggested using a sea urchin larval stage, or pluteus, to depict the strange Arctic organism.
Annulate Pluteus species: a study of the genus Chamaeota in the United States.
The 'Knackers Crumpet' is a localised, common name referring to Pluteus salicinus.
DNA studies have determined that this genus is closely related to Amanita and Pluteus.
Upon reaching the pluteus stage (24 hours post fertilization), an abundance of extracellular matrix is also found associated with the syncytia and blastocoel wall.
Pluteaceae: Pluteus & Volvariella.
Pluteus salicinus, or the knackers crumpet (hallucinogenic)
The study of Matheny et al. in 2006 included Volvariella gloiocephala that was placed as the sister group of Pluteus.
The species Pluteus horakianus shares with P. nevadensis a fragile fruit body, a red cap, and similar cystidial morphology.
This taxon was originally described by American mycologist Alexander H. Smith as Pluteus michiganensis.
The underside of the cap is typical of the genus Pluteus - the gills are pale, soon becoming pink when the spores ripen.
All these larvae are bilaterally symmetrical and have bands of cilia with which they swim and some, usually known as 'pluteus' larvae, have arms.
Mushrooms in the genera Agaricus, Amanita, Lepiota and Pluteus, among others, have free gills that do not extend to the top of the stalk.
Pluteus aurantiorugosus is very similar to P. nevadensis in external appearance, and the two can only be reliably distinguished by microscopic characteristics or DNA sequence.
In the original description there is no mention of a volva at the base of the stipe, one of the morphological characters separating Pluteus from Volvopluteus.
The species was originally collected from San Francisco (California) in 1966 by American mycologist Harry D. Thiers and assigned to Pluteus cyanopus.