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It is commonly known as the netted stinkhorn or the wood witch.
The mushroom is commonly known as the "column stinkhorn".
Next came the flies, black swarms which had possibly grown tired of feeding on stinkhorn.
Ferns include the broad buckler, and there are species of fungi such as the stinkhorn.
Another similar stinkhorn, P. ravenelii has a smooth, not reticulate head.
Staheliomyces is a genus of fungus in the stinkhorn family.
The Phallaceae are a family of fungi, commonly known as stinkhorn mushrooms.
The eggs are enclosed in a tough covering and a gelatinous layer that breaks down as the stinkhorn emerges.
The Octopus Stinkhorn is edible, but its taste is extremely foul.
The dog stinkhorn is probably edible at the 'egg' stage, but it is not recommended.
In the autumn, varieties of fungi including foxy spot, stinkhorn and blushing bracket can be found.
A woodland fungus not easily missed is the stinkhorn phallus impudicus.
Phallus calongei is a species of stinkhorn mushroom.
One field guides notes that the eggs of the stinkhorn fungi "taste like the seasonings that are added to them."
The best known species (and type species) is the common stinkhorn (Phallus impudicus).
"The smell of rotting meat as you walk through the woodland may reveal the presence of a stinkhorn.
West of the Mississippi, the common stinkhorn (Phallus impudicus) becomes more dominant.
But the maiden veil is of the stinkhorn family and emits a frightful smell of rotten meat.
Lured by the odor, flies climb the lace ruffles to the cap where they feed on the stinkhorn slime.
American mycologist David Arora called the odor "the vilest of any stinkhorn".
There's always a birthday gift, and at Christmas we get a load of this delicious beer called Old Stinkhorn from his brewery.
Subconsciously he noted that it came from masses of fungi, black with flies, a variety known as Stinkhorn which grows in dank woodlands.
Notable species include the dog stinkhorn Mutinus caninus.
Like other stinkhorn fungi, C. ruber bioaccumulates the element manganese.
Gleba is the fleshy spore-bearing inner mass of fungi such as the puffball or stinkhorn.