Reddit Reddit reviews Mushrooms of the Midwest

We found 6 Reddit comments about Mushrooms of the Midwest. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Science & Math
Books
Biological Sciences
Ecology
Mushrooms of the Midwest
University of Illinois Press
Check price on Amazon

6 Reddit comments about Mushrooms of the Midwest:

u/najjex · 28 pointsr/mycology

Start by picking a guide for your area and reading it thoroughly, especially focusing on the anatomy of a mushroom. Go hunting a lot bringing back what you find, take spore prints and work though the IDs. Also joining a NAMA affiliated club will help tremendously.

Regional guides

Alaska

Common Interior Alaska Cryptogams

Western US

All The Rain Promises and More
Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest

Midwestern US

Mushrooms of the Midwest

Edible Wild Mushrooms of Illinois and Surrounding States

Mushrooms of the Upper Midwest

Southern US

Texas Mushrooms: A Field Guide

Mushrooms of the Southeastern United States

Midwestern US

Mushrooms of the Midwest

Edible Wild Mushrooms of Illinois and Surrounding States

Mushrooms of the Upper Midwest

Eastern US

Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians

Mushrooms of Northeast North America (This was out of print for awhile but it's they're supposed to be reprinting so the price will be normal again)

Mushrooms of Northeastern North America

Macrofungi Associated with Oaks of Eastern North America(Macrofungi Associated with Oaks of Eastern North America)

Mushrooms of Cape Cod and the National Seashore

More specific guides

Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World

North American Boletes

Tricholomas of North America

Milk Mushrooms of North America

Waxcap Mushrooms of North America

Ascomycete of North America

Ascomycete in colour

Fungi of Switzerland: Vol. 1 Ascomycetes

PDFs

For Pholiotas

For Chlorophyllum

For parasitic fungi, Hypomyces etc "Mushrooms that Grow on other Mushrooms" by John Plischke. There's a free link to it somewhere but I cant find it.

Websites that aren't in the sidebar

For Amanita

For coprinoids

For Ascos

MycoQuebec: they have a kickass app but it's In French

Messiah college this has a lot of weird species for polypores and other things

Books that provide more info than field Mycology

The Kingdom of Fungi Excellent coffee table book has nice pictures and a breif guide to Fungal taxonomy and biology.

The Fifth Kingdom A bit more in depth

Introduction toFungi Textbook outlining metobolic, taxonomic and ecological roles of fungi. Need some level of biochemistry to have a grasp for this one but it's a good book to have.


u/infodoc1 · 3 pointsr/mycology

In Mushrooms of the Midwest, Kuo lists Conocybe apala, C. albipes and C. lactea as synonyms. On the mushroom expert page he lists C. lactea as a synonym for C. albipes but doesn't mention C. apala, however the web page was written in 2007 and the book was published in 2014.

u/JEdwardSal · 2 pointsr/mycology

Judging from the picture location and environment I would say CotW, but never trust us. Do yourself a favor and purchase this bad boy. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0252079760/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

There are also a lot of classes within Michigan if you get serious. https://midwestmycology.org/

u/commanderkielbasa · 2 pointsr/mycology

Can't help or make a recommendation, but atleast the conversation is going in the right direction. Someone will probably chime in with a book rec

Would you consider yourself midwest? This seems like it may be worth considering: Mushrooms of the Midwest https://www.amazon.com/dp/0252079760/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_8U8SCbDR5ZS4H

u/squidboots · 1 pointr/mycology

I've posted this elsewhere but here ya go...

> Avoid the Audubon guide. The Audubon guide is pretty terribad (bad photos, pithy descriptions, not user-friendly.)

> There are much better nationwide guides out there (like the Falcon Guide), but quite honestly you're better off with a regional guide.

> My recs for regional field guides:

> Alaska

> - Common Interior Alaska Cryptogams

> Western US

> - All The Rain Promises and More

u/saurebummer · 1 pointr/mycology

You might also consider Mushrooms of West Virginia and the Central Appalachians or Mushrooms of the Midwest as a good local guide, to go along with a more general North American guide. For a general guide, I'd add Mushrooms Demystified to those already mentioned. Even though it is a little biased towards the west coast, it is still a tremendously valuable resource. It's my go-to (out of the eight field guides I own), even though I am in the northeast!