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snapstill studio (a group admin) says:
24 Sep 08 - ***** PLEASE - read group rules before posting!! This is not a general group for all pics of mushrooms/fungi. It is only for pics of Morels. I've had to remove a large number of non-morel mushroom pics recently, which takes time and shouldn't be necessary. Thanks! ***

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Title Author Replies Latest Post
Rejects 2 snapstill studio 2 31 months ago
What's this mushroom? Valter Jacinto | Portugal 6 32 months ago
full moon potteryman68101 4 32 months ago
The hunt... or the meal? PseudoGil 7 32 months ago
I love mushrooms, but ccs1 1 32 months ago
morchella angusticeps J.'s photos 0 50 months ago

About Morel Mushrooms

This group is all about the genus Morchella. Black, Yellow and Half-free, post all your best Morel Mushroom photos here.

The morel is a type of edible cup fungus. It produces a highly porous ascocarp, prized by gourmet cooks, particularly for French cuisine.

The best known morel is the Morchella deliciosa (Yellow Morel), which is commonly known as simply "morel." Other types include Morchella esculenta, M. elata, M. semilibera, and M. vulgaris. Mushroom hunters will commonly refer to them by their color, i.e., gray, yellow, black, etc., as the species are very similar in appearance and vary considerably within species and age of individual mushroom.

The morel is the state mushroom of Minnesota.

When gathering morels, care must be taken to distinguish them from the poisonous false morel (Gyromitra esculenta and others). However, morels are fairly distinctive in appearance.

The morel grows abundantly in the two and sometimes three years immediately following a forest fire, but where fire suppression is practiced, may grow regularly though in small amount in the same spot year after year. These spots may be jealously guarded by mushroom pickers, as the mushrooms represent a cash crop. They may grow near certain types of trees in symbiotic relationship with them, although this is not yet proven. (There is some evidence that disturbance-following morels may be different species than those growing in relatively undisturbed sites, but genetic confirmation has not yet been accomplished.) Commercial pickers and buyers in North America will follow forest fires to gather morels. Morels have not yet been successfully farmed on a large scale, and the commercial morel industry is based on harvest of wild mushrooms.
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For more Morel info:
mushroomexpert.com/morels/true.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morel
www.michiganmorels.com/

Additional Information

This group is public This is a public group.

  • Accepted media types:
    • Photos
    • Video
  • Accepted content types:
    • Photos / Videos
    • Screenshots / Screencasts
    • Illustration/Art / Animation/CGI
  • Accepted safety levels:
    • Safe
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