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Slender springtail, Entomobrya corticalis on fungi photographed with high magnification
Fungus on the tree trunk. Summer background.
This caterpillars are very beautiful with feathers that bloom around their bodies with very attractive colors, but behind their beauty they are dangerous, because these feathers can cause skin blisters when touched.
Three toed sloth in a Costa Rican cloud forest.
close up view roots of bamboo tree . texture of bamboo roots .
Coriolus hirsutus (Wulf. ex Fr.) Quél. syn. Trametes hirsuta (Wulf. ex Fr.) Pilát. Striegelige Tramete Borostás egyrétûtapló (tapló) Polypore hirsute Bracket 4–10cm across, 2–6cm wide, 0.5–1cm thick, single or in overlapping groups; upper surface covered in silvery hairs, concentrically zoned and contoured, whitish to yellow-brown or grey when young, greying with age. Flesh tough and leathery, white. Taste bitter, smell slightly of aniseed when fresh. Tubes 1–5mm long, white to yellowish. Pores 2–4 per mm, subcircular, white at first later cream, often tinted grey. Spores whitish, ellipsoid to subcylindric, 5.5–7.5 x 1.5–2.5um. Hyphal structure trimitic. Habitat on dead wood of deciduous trees especially on fallen beech trunks in exposed situations. Season all year. Rare. Not edible. Found In Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis a common Species and is photographed in Flevoland in Autumn of 2022.
isopods woodlouse pill bugs merulanella sp vietnam
Coprinus comatus, the shaggy ink cap, lawyer's wig, or shaggy mane, is a common fungus often seen growing on lawns, along gravel roads and waste areas.
Tree cricket on wild plants, North China
Spotted Hyena. Carnassials are large teeth found in many carnivorous mammals.  First lower molar and the last upper premolar possess blade-like enamel crowns that act similar to a pair of shears for cutting meat.
Lichens satured in moisture growing on the bark of a tree on the forest floor.
mycelium
Helvella crispa Fr. White Saddle, Common White Helvella, Helvelle crépue, Oreille de chat, Herbst-Lorchel, Fodros papsapkagomba, Spugnola d'autumno crespa, Witte kluifzwam. Cap 2–5cm high, saddle-shaped and deeply lobed, convoluted at the centre, whitish with pale buff or tan underside. Stem 20–60 x 10–20mm white, hollow and deeply furrowed. Asci 300 x 18µ. Spores elliptical, 18–20 x 10–13µ. Habitat on path-sides in damp, deciduous woods. Season late summer to late autumn and occasionally in spring. Common. Edible – poor. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis nice Species grows especially on calcareous Soils and is quite common in the Netherlands in the described Habitats.
Xylaria polymorpha, Dead mans fingers mushrooms, growing in moss on a fallen beech tree in a West Yorkshire woodland. Photo is a close up showing them growing, taken in October on a rainy wet day with a Canon 700D slr camera.
Mushroom at Lake O'Hara in 1996. From old film stock.
The soil after a rain.
Assorted fungi that sprouts up everywhere in the Pacific Northwest with the Autumn rain.
Macro of wilted orange mushroom on wood (Dacryopinax spathularia)
A macro view of wet and striving moss in forest
Microorganism or virus cells, algae microorganism cells under microscope. Rapid multiplication of bacteria. Infection and germ. Microbiology, popular scientific black background
Photomicrograph of
A closeup shot of a mushroom in a fores
Fomes fomentarius (L. ex Fr.) Kickx Echter Zunderschwamm Amadouvier, Hoof Fungus or Tinder Bracket. Bracket 5–45cm across, 3–25cm wide, 2–25cm thick, hoof-shaped, hard and woody, usually discrete but several fruit bodies may occur on the same trunk; upper surface with a hard horny crust, concentrically grooved and zoned grey. Flesh hard, fibrous, cinnamon-brown. Taste acrid, smell slightly fruity. Tubes 2–7mm long in each layer, rusty-brown. Pores 2–3 per mm, circular, light grey-brown darkening when handled.\n\nHabitat usually on birch in Scotland and Northern England, but also on beech (in the Netherlands). The few record from Southern England are mostly on beech and sycamore. Season sporulating in spring to early summer, perennial. Quite common in the Netherlands on Birch and Beech. Not edible. Distribution, America and Europe (source R. Phillips).\n\nThis is a beautiful Wood Fungus on dead Wood of Beech ( Fagus sylvatica) and Birch (Betula pendula). This one grows on a Trunk of Beech.\n\nIn earlier Days, the inner Part of the Fungus was used to make Fire.
Close up photo of fungus attached to fallen wood. Also dead wood
Bracket fungus with lichen and moss on stump of dead white ash tree, Connecticut
Cicada killer perched on a mushroom.
Salt formations on the stones of Garmasr salt cave in Iran
Spruce (Picea abies) cone peeled by a squirrel in order to eat the seeds on the tree trunk.
Termitomyces, the termite mushrooms, is a genus of basidiomycete fungi belonging to the family Lyophyllaceae.
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