The mushrooms














    
support our next site RogersFlowers.com

Sarcodon scabrosum.   Click a photo to enlarge it.   back to list

synonyms: Bitter Tooth, Gallen-Stacheling, Sarcodon écailleux
Sarcodon scabrosum Mushroom
Ref No: 8880
Buy this image
Sarcodon scabrosum2 Mushroom
Ref No: 8881
Buy this image
location: North America, Europe
edibility: Inedible
fungus colour: Brown, Grey to beige
normal size: 5-15cm
cap type: Distinctly scaly
spore colour: Light to dark brown
habitat: Grows in woods, Grows on the ground

Sarcodon scabrosum (Fr.) Karst. syn. Hydnum scabrosum Fr. Gallen-Stacheling Sarcodon écailleux, Bitter Tooth. Fruit body single or fusing with others. Cap 4–14cm across, flattened convex or centrally depressed, covered in down and smooth at first soon becoming cracked and scaly, background color dirty yellowish covered in cinnamon, rusty or purplish-brown scales. Stem 25–100 x 10–30mm, tapering towards the base, downy to fibrous-scaly, dark flesh-colour eventually concolorous with cap scales, grey-green, blue-green or blackish green below. Flesh grey-green in base of stem. Taste bitter and acrid, smell mealy. Spines 1–10mm long, yellowish-white eventually becoming purplish-brown. Spores brownish, tuberculate (5.5)6–7.5 x (3.5)4–5um. Habitat coniferous and deciduous woods. Season autumn. Rare. Not edible. Distribution, America and Europe.

Members' images and comments

Click here to upload and share your photos and comments about this mushroom (JPEG only please).
By uploading images and text you hereby warrant that you are the legal owner of this material and agree, without limitation, to permit Rogers Plants Ltd to publish such images and text on this Rogers Plants website. Rogers Plants Ltd reserves the right to remove any member images or text at its sole discretion.
© 2001-2010 Rogers Plants Ltd. All rights reserved. The text and photographs on this site may not be reproduced in any form without the written permission of Rogers Plants Ltd. Please see our Terms and Conditions. Site by Glide Technologies Ltd. Poisoning Disclaimer.
Don't forget to visit our sister sites RogersRoses and RogersTreesandShrubs.