Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
But when these mushrooms are wet, they could look like a wood blewit, which is pale white up to deep purple.
Lepista nuda (Wood blewit)
The wood blewit is found in Europe and North America and is becoming more common in Australia, where it appears to have been introduced.
It is commonly found growing in grassy areas across Europe and is morphologically related to the wood blewit (Lepista nuda).
The French mycologist Pierre Bulliard described the wood blewit in 1790 as Agaricus nudus.
Blewit refers to two closely related species of edible agarics in the genus Clitocybe, the wood blewit (Clitocybe nuda) and the field blewit or blue-leg (C.saeva).
Clitocybe nuda (also recognized as Lepista nuda and Tricholoma nudum, commonly known as the wood blewit or blue stalk mushroom), is an edible mushroom, found in both coniferous and deciduous woodlands.
Recent molecular work has shown the genus to be polyphyletic, with many members seemingly distantly related and other fungi, such as the field blewit and wood blewit, now known as Clitocybe saeva and C. nuda respectively, are more closely related.
Soil analysis of soil containing mycelium from a wood blewit fairy ring under Norway spruce (Picea abies) and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) in southeast Sweden yielded fourteen halogenated low molecular weight organic compounds, three of which were brominated and the others chlorinated.