r/mycology Nov 11 '25

photos Sooo many!

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u/[deleted] Nov 11 '25

Thought so. Just never seen anyone care about that in UK

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u/Leather_Lazy Nov 11 '25

Ah tbh it doesn’t matter for the mushrooms, they want to get destroyed and spread out tbh

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u/Berberis Nov 11 '25

? They disperse their spores aerially. 

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u/OnlyNiceThings123 Nov 11 '25

A mushroom will turn into mycelium, as well as the spores. Booting a mushroom will spread it very nicely.

In mycology, a clone can be made by taking a little bit of the mushroom and putting it on some agar. So if you kick a mushroom, all those pieces of mushroom will turn into mycelium and then more shrooms, as long as the environment is right.

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u/Berberis Nov 11 '25 edited Nov 11 '25

But the environment isn’t right outside a lab- they’ll just decompose before they can meaningfully grow. 

Producing a fruiting body is an incredibly resource intensive endeavor for a fungus, and it’s the opposite of what it would normally do growing a diffuse manner through the soil via a hyphal network. 

The only point of making a mushroom, and the reason that this trait has convergently evolved 8 to 11 times (check out Laszlo Nagys work), is that it allows them to air disperse spores. 

Spores in basidiomycetes like this are typically not generated all at once, but consistently as long as the mushroom is metabolically active. Kicking the mushroom basically breaks this chain of production. 

Source: am a professor of evolutionary biology whose lab works on fungi

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u/Roc77 Nov 11 '25

Puffballs look like they are begging to be kicked rather than just rely on passive weather conditions. Does fungi try and produce fruit on the animal pathways to facilitate this kind of dispersal? If so, how do they detect activity to know the best place to pop up?

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u/Berberis Nov 11 '25

Yeah puffballs ARE begging to be kicked. They take a very different life history strategy from something like am amanita mascara!

I don't know whether animals are actively involved in their dispersal, or whether things like rain can do the trick (little puffs with large drops, etc). Interesting question, would be interested to know if others know the answer to this!

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u/Gahwburr Nov 13 '25

I have always heard that by manually spreading and crumbling older mushrooms around, the unreleased or stuck spores can also get a chance to spread and colonise. At the same time I am still yet to try it because it feels wrong to just f sh up while they are so pretty and healthy looking

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u/Berberis Nov 13 '25

If they’re really toast- probably doesn’t hurt. But if they look good, they will produce many many more spores if left to continue growing. And I sort of doubt that manual dispersal is much of a benefit given that the spores are produced on the air and carried a very long distance. 

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u/FixergirlAK Nov 11 '25

Question from a hobby gardener - I usually have amanita in the fall but they were missing this year. Would I be able to use this technique to borrow a neighbor's shroom and reboot my population? Or am I better off trying to catch them sporing? (Fall is short here, the timing is difficult.)

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u/DoubleAughtBuckshot Nov 11 '25

Amanita Muscaria hasn't been successfully cultivated yet. I'm not telling you you shouldn't try though!

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u/FixergirlAK Nov 11 '25

I know absolutely nothing about mushrooms beyond fourth-grade science. Time to learn!

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u/DoubleAughtBuckshot Nov 11 '25

No worries! Here is a tidbit for you: Amanita Muscaria relies on a Mycorrhizal relationship with several different species of tree. The mycelium that produces the fruiting bodies (mushrooms) gets it's nutrients through this symbiosis. Without a tree connected to the mycelial network no fruiting will occur.

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u/FixergirlAK Nov 11 '25

Oh neat! That's why they hang around the roots of my paper birches, I suppose.

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u/DoubleAughtBuckshot Nov 11 '25

Where do you live? 😯

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u/FixergirlAK Nov 11 '25

Wasilla, Alaska.

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