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Werke von Karl B McKnight

Getagged

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My first illustrated mushroom field guide and I'm coming to like it quite a bit. Like most mushroom books geared to ID, there are keys to follow to lead you to a suspect. Unlike many of those, this doesn't use a dichotomous key, but rather a chart that looks much like a target. You start in the middle with the gill color and move to the outer rings through, gill attachment, cap color and size, and finally stipe color and size. Relative sizes are given at the beginning of the book so you know what is a medium sized stalk versus a small one, etc. While it doesn't work every time, it works fairly well and a few tries got me to the right ballpark for my particular mushroom. It makes a nice change from the reliance on spore color because who goes to the trouble to make spore prints? As a nature photographer it's a pain for me to collect because I'm already lugging a bunch of gear.

As I said, every mushroom ID book has its strengths and weaknesses and unfortunately I think they missed an obvious key identifier that could have been incorporated fairly easily - where the mushroom is fruiting. Other books I use note this in the descriptions, but not this one, and it's puzzling.

While reading about the Russula family I came across this absolute gem -

The group of mushrooms called Brittlegills (Russula) is one of the most speciose groups of mushrooms worldwide. They are important in many forest ecosystems of the world. They are also incredibly hard to identify for amateurs and professionals alike, with or without microscopes. So as you study these pages and others that have Brittlegills, make your best guess and don’t worry about the exact species name. If you really want to worry about the species of Brittlegills, seek out one of two people in the entire world who are qualified to help you study Russulas so that you can start a graduate program in mycological systematics, and the rest of us will thank you for years to come.

OMG - nerdy fungi humor. Priceless.
… (mehr)
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Gekennzeichnet
Bookmarque | Sep 21, 2022 |
Every few years I'd go on Amazon and see if anyone published a field guide to moss. 'No not yet' was the answer I got most all the time. Then in 2013 my hopes were answered with this book. I LOVE moss (and like bumblebees I've been known to pet it) and photograph it often (if only incidentally when shooting mushrooms) and now I can kind of figure out what kind it is. Especially when it's making sporophytes, the tall little pods on stalks that contain the reproductive spores of the plant. The book is divided into sections by moss type and leaf shape. The intro has a very useful guide to using the book. Individual moss entries get photos of the moss as it grows as well as a drawing of the plant and macro photos of its leaves. Some get detailed drawings of sporophytes, leaves and groups of leaves including cut-away images. It's fabulous. And it's the only field guide I have that has a clear plastic book cover. I loves it.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
Bookmarque | Sep 7, 2016 |

Statistikseite

Werke
2
Mitglieder
105
Beliebtheit
#183,191
Bewertung
4.0
Rezensionen
2
ISBNs
4

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