View allAll Photos Tagged toadstool
I’am no good in naming toadstools. But I do like to take pictures of them.
In this case it’s a stack of seven pictures (Helicon Focus) to create sufficient depth of field.
Canon 40D
Canon EF100mm f/2.8 Macro USM
ISO 100, 1/60 sec., f/9,0
+1/3 EV
Mushroom vs. toadstool
The relative sizes of the cap (pileus) and stalk (stipe) vary widely. Shown here is a species of Macrolepiota.
The terms "mushroom" and "toadstool" go back centuries and were never precisely defined, nor was there consensus on application.
The term "toadstool" was often, but not exclusively, applied to poisonous mushrooms or to those that have the classic umbrella-like cap-and-stem form. Between 1400 and 1600 A.D., the terms tadstoles, frogstooles, frogge stoles, tadstooles, tode stoles, toodys hatte, paddockstool, puddockstool, paddocstol, toadstoole, and paddockstooles sometimes were used synonymously with mushrom, mushrum, muscheron, mousheroms, mussheron, or musserouns.[3]
The term "mushroom" and its variations may have been derived from the French word mousseron in reference to moss (mousse). There may have been a direct connection to toads (in reference to poisonous properties) for toadstools. However, there is no clear-cut delineation between edible and poisonous fungi, so that a "mushroom" may be edible, poisonous, or unpalatable. The term "toadstool" is nowadays used in storytelling when referring to poisonous or suspect mushrooms. The classic example of a toadstool is Amanita muscaria.
Little scene from my garden.
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© 2012. Janice Heppenstall. All Rights Reserved.
PLEASE NOTE: This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without the explicit written permission of the photographer.
I don't know if they are actually toadstools. I kind of don't think so. But I like the fairytale imagery.