Dictionary Definition
toadstool n : common name for an inedible or
poisonous agaric (contrasting with the edible mushroom) [ant:
mushroom]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- (UK)
- /ˈtəʊdstuːl/
- /"t@Udstu:l/
- (US)
- /ˈtoʊdˌstu(ə)l/
- /"toU%dstu(@)l/
Etymology
Middle English tadde (toad) < Old English tadie, of unknown origin; + Middle English stole (stool) < Old English stol < Proto-Germanic *stolaz < Proto-Indo-European *sta-lo-, locative of PIE base *sta- (to stand).Translations
an inedible or poisonous mushroom
- Dutch: giftige paddestoel , gifzwam
- Finnish: myrkkysieni
- French: champignon vénéneux
- Japanese: 茸 (きのこ, kinoko)
- Polish: muchomor
- Russian: поганка (pogánka)
- Slovene: mušnica
Translations to be checked
- German: Pilz , Champignon , Schwammerl
- Italian: fungo
Extensive Definition
A mushroom is the fleshy, spore-bearing fruiting
body of a fungus,
typically produced above ground on soil or on its food source. The
standard for the name "mushroom" is the cultivated white button
mushroom, Agaricus
bisporus, hence the word mushroom is most often applied to
fungi (Basidiomycota,
Agaricomycetes)
that have a stem (stipe),
a cap (pileus),
and gills (lamellae, sing. lamella)
on the underside of the cap just as do store-bought white
mushrooms. However, "mushroom" can also refer to a wide variety of
gilled fungi, with or without stems, and the term is used even more
generally to describe both the fleshy fruiting bodies of some
Ascomycota and
the woody or leathery fruiting bodies of some Basidiomycota,
depending upon the context of the word. Forms deviating from the
standard form usually have more specific names, such as "puffball", "stinkhorn", and "morel", and gilled mushrooms
themselves are often called "agarics" in reference to their
similarity to Agaricus or their
placement in the order Agaricales. By
extension, "mushroom" can also designate the entire fungus when in
culture or the thallus
(called a mycelium) of
species forming the fruiting bodies called mushrooms.
Identification
Identifying mushrooms requires a basic
understanding of their macroscopic structure. Most
are Basidiomycetes
and gilled. Their spores, called basidiospores, are produced
on the gills and fall in a fine rain of powder from under the caps
as a result. At the microscopic level the basidiospores are shot
off of basidia and then
fall between the gills in the dead air space. As a result, for most
mushrooms, if the cap is cut off and placed gill-side-down
overnight, a powdery impression reflecting the shape of the gills
(or pores, or spines, etc.) is formed (when the fruitbody is
sporulating). The color of the powdery print, called a spore print,
is used to help classify mushrooms and can help to identify them.
Spore print colors include white (most common), brown, black,
purple-brown, pink, yellow, and cream, but almost never blue,
green, or red. While modern identification of mushrooms is quickly
becoming molecular, the standard methods for identification are
still used by most and have developed into a fine art harking back
to medieval times and
the Victorian
era, combined with microscopic examination. The presence of
juices upon breaking, bruising reactions, odors, tastes, shades of
color, habitat, habit, and season are all considered by
mycologists, amateur and professional alike. Tasting and smelling
mushrooms carries its own hazards because of poisons and allergens. Chemical tests are also used for some
genera. In general, identification to genus can often be accomplished in
the field using a local mushroom guide. Identification to species, however, requires more
effort; one must remember that a mushroom develops from a button
stage into a mature structure, and only the latter can provide
certain characteristics needed for the identification of the
species. However, over-mature specimens lose features and cease
producing spores. Many novices have mistaken humid water marks on
paper for white spore prints, or discolored paper from oozing
liquids on lamella edges for colored spored prints.
Classification
Typical mushrooms are the fruitbodies of members of the order Agaricales, whose type genus is Agaricus and type species is the field mushroom, Agaricus campestris. However, in modern molecularly defined classifications, not all members of the order Agaricales produce mushroom fruitbodies, and many other gilled fungi, collectively called mushrooms, occur in other orders in the class Agaricomycetes. For example, chanterelles are in the Cantharellales, false chanterelles like Gomphus are in the Gomphales, milk mushrooms (Lactarius) and russulas (Russula) as well as Lentinellus are in the Russulales, while the tough leathery genera Lentinus and Panus are among the Polyporales, but Neolentinus is in the Gloeophyllales, and the little pin-mushroom genus, Rickenella, along with similar genera, are in the Hymenochaetales.Within the main body of mushrooms, in the
Agaricales,
are common fungi like the common fairy-ring mushroom (Marasmius
oreades), shiitake,
enoki, oyster
mushrooms, fly agarics,
and other amanitas,
magic
mushrooms like species of Psilocybe,
paddy straw
mushrooms, shaggy
manes, etc.
An atypical mushroom is the Lobster
mushroom, which is a deformed, cooked-lobster-colored parasitized fruitbody of a
Russula or
Lactarius
colored and deformed by the mycoparasitic Ascomycete
Hypomyces
lactifluorum.
Other mushrooms are non-gilled, and then the term
"mushroom" is loosely used, so that it is difficult to give a full
account of their classifications. Some have pores underneath (and
are usually called boletes), others have spines,
such as the hedgehog
mushroom and other tooth fungi,
and so on. "Mushroom" has been used for polypores, puffballs, jelly fungi,
coral
fungi, bracket
fungi, stinkhorns,
and cup
fungi. Thus, the term mushroom is more one of common
application to macroscopic fungal fruiting
bodies than one having precise taxonomic meaning. There are
approximately 14,000 described species of mushrooms.
Mushroom vs. toadstool
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. 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.Growth rates
Many species of mushrooms seemingly appear
overnight, growing or expanding rapidly. This phenomenon is the
source of several common expressions in the English
language including "to mushroom" or "mushrooming" (expanding
rapidly in size or scope) and "to pop up like a mushroom" (to
appear unexpectedly and quickly). In actuality all species of
mushrooms take several days to form primordial mushroom
fruitbodies, though they do expand rapidly by the absorption of
fluids. The cultivated
mushroom as well as the common field
mushroom initially form a minute fruiting
body, referred to as the pin stage because of their small size.
Slightly expanded they are called buttons, once again because of
the relative size and shape. Once such stages are formed, the
mushroom can rapidly pull in water from its mycelium and expand, mainly by
inflating preformed cells that
took several days to form in the primordia. Similarly, there
are even more ephemeral mushrooms, like Parasola
plicatilis (http://collectivesource.com/fungi/newpages/Coprinus_plicatilis.html
formerly Coprinus
plicatlis), that literally appear overnight and may disappear by
late afternoon on a hot day after rainfall. The primordia form at
ground level in lawns in humid spaces under the thatch and after heavy rainfall
or in dewy conditions
balloon to full size in a few hours, release spores, and then
collapse. They "mushroom" to full size. The slang term "mushrooms" is a
gang-related term for victims accidentally shot as collateral
damage simply because they popped up suddenly, as do fungal
mushrooms.
Not all mushrooms expand overnight; some grow
very slowly and add tissue to their fruitbodies by growing from the
edges of the colony or by inserting hyphae.
Size and age
Though mushroom fruiting bodies are short-lived, the underlying mycelial colony can itself be long-lived and massive. A colony of Armillaria ostoyae in Malheur National Forest in the United States is estimated to be 2,400 years old, possibly older, and spans an estimated 2,200 acres. Most of the fungus is underground and in decaying wood or dying tree roots in the form of white mycelia combined with black shoelace-like rhizomorphs that bridge colonized separated woody substrates.Human use
see EthnomycologyEdible mushrooms
Edible mushrooms are used extensively in cooking, in many cuisines (notably Chinese, European, and Japanese). Though mushrooms are commonly thought to have little nutritional value, many species are high in fiber and provide vitamins such as thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, biotin, cobalamins, ascorbic acid. Though not normally a significant source of vitamin D, some mushrooms can become significant sources after exposure to ultraviolet light, though this also darkens their skin. Mushrooms are also a source of some minerals, including iron, selenium, potassium and phosphorus.Most mushrooms that are sold in supermarkets have
been commercially grown on mushroom
farms. The most popular of these, Agaricus
bisporus, is safe for most people to eat because it is grown in
controlled, sterilized environments, though some individuals do not
tolerate it well. Several varieties of A. bisporus are grown
commercially, including whites, crimini, and portabello.
Other cultivated species now available at many grocers include
shiitake, maitake or hen-of-the-woods,
oyster,
and enoki. There are a
number of species of mushroom that are poisonous, and although some
resemble certain edible species, eating them could be fatal. Eating
mushrooms gathered in the wild is risky and should not be
undertaken by individuals not knowledgeable in mushroom
identification, unless the individuals limit themselves to a
relatively small number of good edible species that are visually
distinctive. More generally, and particularly with gilled
mushrooms, separating edible from poisonous species requires
meticulous attention to detail; there is no single trait by which
all toxic mushrooms can be identified, nor one by which all edible
mushrooms can be identified.
People who collect mushrooms for consumption are
known as mycophagists, and the act of collecting them for such is
known as mushroom
hunting, or simply "mushrooming".
Toxic mushrooms
Of central interest with respect to the chemical
properties of mushrooms is the fact that many species produce
secondary
metabolites that render them toxic, mind-altering, or even
bioluminescent.
Though there are only a small number of deadly
species, several have particularly severe and unpleasant
symptoms. Toxicity likely plays a role in protecting the function
of the basidiocarp: the mycelium has expended considerable energy
and protoplasmic material to develop a structure to efficiently
distribute its spores. One defense against consumption and
premature destruction is the evolution of chemicals that render the
mushroom inedible, either causing the consumer to vomit (see
emetics) the meal or
avoid consumption altogether.
Psychoactive mushrooms
Psilocybin
mushrooms possess psychedelic
properties. They are commonly known as "magic mushrooms" "mush"
or "shrooms" and are available in smart shops in
many parts of the world, though some countries have outlawed their
sale. A number of other mushrooms are eaten for their psychoactive
effects, such as fly
agaric, which is used for shamanic purposes by tribes in
northeast Siberia, Russia.
They have also been used in the West to potentiate, or increase,
religious experiences. Because of their psychoactive properties,
some mushrooms have played a role in native medicine, where they
have been used in an attempt to effect mental and physical healing,
and to facilitate visionary states. One such ritual is the Velada ceremony. A
practitioner of traditional mushroom use is the shaman and curandera (priest-healer)
María
Sabina.
Medicinal mushrooms
Currently, many species of mushrooms and fungi
used in folk
medicine for thousands of years are under intense study by
ethnobotanists and
medical researchers. Maitake,
shiitake, chaga, and
reishi are prominent
among those being researched for their potential anti-cancer, anti-viral, or immunity-enhancing
properties. Psilocybin,
originally an extract of certain psychedelic mushrooms, is being
studied for its ability to help people suffering from mental
disease, such as
obsessive-compulsive disorder. Minute amounts have been
reported to stop cluster
and migraine
headaches.http://www.neurology.org/cgi/content/abstract/66/12/1920
Other uses
Mushrooms can be used for dyeing wool and other natural fibers. The chromophores of mushrooms are organic compounds and produce strong and vivid colors, and all colors of the spectrum can be achieved with mushroom dyes. Before the invention of synthetic dyes mushrooms were the primary source of textile dyes. This technique has survived in Finland, and many Middle Ages re-enactors have revived the skill. Some fungi, types of polypores loosely called mushrooms, have been used as fire starters (known as tinder fungi). Ötzi the Iceman was found carrying such fungi. Mushrooms and other fungi will likely play an increasingly important role in the development of effective biological remediation and filtration technologies. The US Patent and Trademark office can be searched for patents related to the latest developments in mycoremediation and mycofiltration.References
Further reading
- Edible Wild Mushrooms of North America: A Field-to-kitchen Guide (1992) ISBN 0-292-72080-0
- Mushrooms of Northeastern North America (1997) ISBN 0-8156-0388-6
- All That the Rain Promises, and More (1991) ISBN 0-89815-388-3
- Growing Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms (2000) ISBN 1-58008-175-4
- Mushroom Cultivator: A Practical Guide to Growing Mushrooms at Home (1983) ISBN 0-9610798-0-0
- Mushrooms: Cultivation, Nutritional Value, Medicinal Effect, and Environmental Impact (2004) ISBN 0-8493-1043-1
- Mycelium Running: How Mushrooms Will Save The World (2005) ISBN 1-58008-579-2
- Mushrooms Demystified: A Comprehensive Guide to the Fleshy Fungi (1986) ISBN 0-89815-169-4
- Psilocybin Mushroom Handbook: Easy Indoor and Outdoor Cultivation (2004) ISBN 0-932551-64-5
- Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World (1996) ISBN 0-89815-839-7
External links
- David Fischer's American Mushrooms
- Mushroom Expert
- MykoWeb
- Roger's Mushrooms
- Mushroom Observer (All images are made available under a Creative Commons license.)
- North American Mycological Association
- An Aid to Mushroom Identification, Simon's Rock College
- Online Edible Wild Mushroom Field Guide
- Mushroom Council
- Myconews – Mushroom industry news
- Pictures Mushrooms
Research related
toadstool in Tosk Albanian: Pilze
toadstool in Arabic: فطر
toadstool in Aragonese: Potrecón
toadstool in Samogitian: Kremblē
toadstool in Bulgarian: Гъби
toadstool in Bosnian: Gljive
toadstool in Catalan: Bolet
toadstool in Czech: Plodnice
toadstool in Danish: Svampe
toadstool in German: Pilze
toadstool in Spanish: Seta
toadstool in Modern Greek (1453-):
Μανιτάρι
toadstool in Finnish: Sienet
toadstool in French: Champignon
toadstool in Irish: Fungas
toadstool in Galician: Cogomelo
toadstool in Hindi: कुकुरमुत्ता
toadstool in Croatian: Gljive
toadstool in Upper Sorbian: Hriby
toadstool in Hebrew: פטריות
toadstool in Icelandic: Sveppur
toadstool in Italian: Fungo
toadstool in Japanese: キノコ
toadstool in Korean: 버섯
toadstool in Latin: Fungi
toadstool in Luxembourgish: Pilzeräich
toadstool in Lithuanian: Grybai
toadstool in Lingala: Likombó
toadstool in Latvian: Sēnes
toadstool in Macedonian: Габа
toadstool in Malay (macrolanguage):
Cendawan
toadstool in Dutch: Paddenstoel (schimmel)
toadstool in Norwegian: Sopper
toadstool in Occitan (post 1500): Mycota
toadstool in Polish: Owocnik
toadstool in Portuguese: Cogumelo
toadstool in Serbian: Гљива
toadstool in Russian: Грибы
toadstool in Simple English: Mushroom
toadstool in Slovak: Huby
toadstool in Slovenian: Glive
toadstool in Serbian: Гљива
toadstool in Swedish: Svampar
toadstool in Tonga (Tonga Islands):
Fakamaluʻatēvolo
toadstool in Thai: เห็ด
toadstool in Turkish: Mantar
toadstool in Uighur: مور
toadstool in Ukrainian: Гриб
toadstool in Walloon: Tchampion
toadstool in Yiddish: שוועמל
toadstool in Contenese: 菇
toadstool in Chinese: 蕈類
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
algae,
autophyte, bean, bracken, brown algae, climber, conferva, confervoid, creeper, diatom, fern, fruits and vegetables,
fucus, fungus, grapevine, green algae,
gulfweed, herb, heterophyte, ivy, kelp, legume, lentil, liana, lichen, liverwort, mold, moss, mushroom, parasite, parasitic plant,
pea, perthophyte, phytoplankton, planktonic
algae, plant families, puffball, pulse, red algae, rockweed, rust, saprophyte, sargasso, sargassum, sea lentil, sea
moss, sea wrack, seaweed, smut, succulent, vetch, vine, wort, wrack