'' buttons emerging from their universal veils of
Lactarius indigo, a
milk-cap mushroom '' (the "common puffball") has a
glebal hymenium; when young, the interior is white, but it becomes brown containing powdery
spores as the fungus matures. '' asci viewed with
phase contrast microscopy A mushroom develops from a nodule, or pinhead, less than two millimeters in diameter, called a
primordium, which is typically found on or near the surface of the
substrate. It is formed within the
mycelium, the mass of threadlike
hyphae that make up the fungus. The primordium enlarges into a roundish structure of interwoven hyphae roughly resembling an egg, called a "button". The button has a cottony roll of mycelium, the
universal veil, that surrounds the developing fruit body. As the egg expands, the universal veil ruptures and may remain as a cup, or
volva, at the base of the
stalk, or as warts or volval patches on the cap. Many mushrooms lack a universal veil, therefore they do not have either a volva or volval patches. Often, a second layer of tissue, the
partial veil, covers the blade-like
gills that bear
spores. As the cap expands the veil breaks, and remnants of the partial veil may remain as a ring, or
annulus, around the middle of the stalk or as fragments hanging from the margin of the cap. The ring may be skirt-like as in some species of
Amanita, collar-like as in many species of
Lepiota, or merely the faint remnants of a cortina (a partial veil composed of filaments resembling a spiderweb), which is typical of the genus
Cortinarius. Mushrooms lacking partial veils do not form an annulus. The stalk (also called the stipe, or stem) may be central and support the cap in the middle, or it may be off-center or lateral, as in species of
Pleurotus and
Panus. In other mushrooms, a stalk may be absent, as in the polypores that form shelf-like brackets.
Puffballs lack a stalk, but may have a supporting base. Other mushrooms including
truffles,
jellies,
earthstars, and
bird's nests usually do not have stalks, and a specialized mycological vocabulary exists to describe their parts. The way the gills attach to the top of the stalk is an important feature of mushroom morphology. Mushrooms in the genera
Agaricus,
Amanita,
Lepiota and
Pluteus, among others, have free gills that do not extend to the top of the stalk. Others have
decurrent gills that extend down the stalk, as in the genera
Omphalotus and
Pleurotus. There are a great number of variations between the extremes of free and decurrent, collectively called attached gills. Finer distinctions are often made to distinguish the types of attached gills: adnate gills, which adjoin squarely to the stalk; notched gills, which are notched where they join the top of the stalk; adnexed gills, which curve upward to meet the stalk, and so on. These distinctions between attached gills are sometimes difficult to interpret, since gill attachment may change as the mushroom matures, or with different environmental conditions.
Microscopic features A
hymenium is a layer of microscopic spore-bearing cells that covers the surface of gills. In the nongilled mushrooms, the hymenium lines the inner surfaces of the tubes of
boletes and polypores, or covers the teeth of spine fungi and the branches of corals. In the Ascomycota, spores develop within microscopic elongated, sac-like cells called
asci, which typically contain eight spores in each ascus. The
Discomycetes, which contain the cup, sponge, brain, and some club-like fungi, develop an exposed layer of asci, as on the inner surfaces of
cup fungi or within the pits of
morels. The
Pyrenomycetes, tiny dark-colored fungi that live on a wide range of substrates including soil, dung,
leaf litter, and decaying wood, as well as other fungi, produce minute, flask-shaped structures called
perithecia, within which the asci develop. In the basidiomycetes, usually four spores develop on the tips of thin projections called
sterigmata, which extend from club-shaped cells called a
basidia. The fertile portion of the
Gasteromycetes, called a
gleba, may become powdery as in the puffballs or slimy as in the
stinkhorns. Interspersed among the asci are threadlike sterile cells called
paraphyses. Similar structures called
cystidia often occur within the hymenium of the Basidiomycota. Many types of cystidia exist, and assessing their presence, shape, and size is often used to verify the identification of a mushroom. Glucans have potential roles in reserving energy, providing structure, cell-to-cell signaling, and cellular protection. ==Growth==