Some tiny mushrooms in the forrest

in PhotoFeed2 years ago

Mushrooms are a very nice and divers species, they grow in our forests and most of them only show a fraction of their size with their mushroom body outside of the ground. Of course the specimens here may only have a small compared to the biggest mushrooms, but the mushroom body we see outside of the ground is only a very small fraction of the size of myzel. Mushrooms (fungus) are the biggest living species on earth and can really grow huge. A lot of mushrooms live in symbiosis with trees and other plants but there are also parasites that slowly kill their feeder.

Using genotyping and clonal analysis, scientists determined that a 2500-year old specimen of Armillaria ostoyae in northern Michigan, United States originated from spores of a parent fungus in Ontario, Canada, then grew over millennia into the 21st century to a mass of 440 tons (4 x 105 kg), making it the equivalent in weight of 3 blue whales. By comparison of acreage, the Michigan A. ostoyae covers only 38% of the estimated land area of the Oregon "humongous fungus" at 3.5 square miles (9.1 km2),(2,240 acres (910 ha) which may weigh as much as 35,000 tons. It is currently the world's largest single living organism.

--
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armillaria_ostoyae

DSC_6056.jpg
Tiny Mushroom. Picture: Florian Glechner.

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/1000 Seconds
Aperture usedF8
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100

DSC_6059.jpg
I love how it blends into the green moss and the greyish root. Picture. Florian Glechner.

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/1000 Seconds
Aperture usedF4
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100

DSC_6024.jpg
Colorfull yellow tree mushroom. Picture: Florian Glechner.

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/1000 Seconds
Aperture usedF8
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100

DSC_6026.jpg
Picture: Florian Glechner.

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/1000 Seconds
Aperture usedF8
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100

DSC_6042.jpg
Some mushrooms are difficult to spot because of their camouflage color. Picture: Florian Glechner.

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/1000 Seconds
Aperture usedF8
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100

DSC_6050.jpg

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/1000 Seconds
Aperture usedF8
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100

DSC_6037.jpg
Tiny mushroom emerging from a tree. Picture: Florian Glechner.

Camera usedNikon D500
Lens usedTamron 90mm Macro lens
Filter usednone
Exposure Time1/500 Seconds
Aperture usedF4
Focal Length90 mm
Time09:50 am
ISO100
Sort:  

!discovery 25


This post was shared and voted inside the discord by the curators team of discovery-it
Join our community! hive-193212
Discovery-it is also a Witness, vote for us here
Delegate to us for passive income. Check our 80% fee-back Program

Your content has been voted as a part of Encouragement program. Keep up the good work!

Use Ecency daily to boost your growth on platform!

Support Ecency
Vote for new Proposal
Delegate HP and earn more

The first photo is especially cool. A small mushroom on the background of a fluffy mosa carpet.

Yes thank you, u thought that too. And I also like the small stars that can be found.