Spiny Milkweed (Lactarius spinosulus)

Usoro:
  • Nkeji: Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
  • Nkebi: Agaricomycotina (Agaricomycetes)
  • Klas: Agaricomycetes (Agaricomycetes)
  • Subclass: nke na-ejighị n'aka ọnọdụ
  • Iwu: Russulales (Russulovye)
  • Ezinụlọ: Russulaceae (Russula)
  • Genus: Lactarius (Milky)
  • ụdị: Lactarius spinosulus (Spiny milkweed)

Milky prickly (Nke t. Lactarius spinosulus) bụ ero dị na genus Lactarius (lat. Lactarius) nke ezinụlọ Russulaceae.

Spiny lactic cap:

Diameter 2-5 cm, in youth it is flat or convex, with a folded edge, with age it becomes prostrate or even funnel-shaped, often with an uneven edge, on which slight pubescence is noticeable. The color is pink-red, with pronounced zoning. The surface of the cap is dry, slightly hairy. The flesh is thin, whitish, turning gray at the break. The milky juice is white, not caustic.

Ihe ndekọ:

Yellowish, of medium thickness and frequency, adherent.

Spore ntụ ntụ:

Pale ocher.

The leg of the spiked milkweed:

Height 3-5 cm, thickness up to 0,8 cm, cylindrical, hollow, often curved, cap-colored or lighter, with fragile flesh.

Kesaa:

Prickly milkweed occurs in August-September in deciduous and mixed forests, mycorrhizing with birch.

Ụdị ndị eyitere:

First of all, the spiny milkweed looks like a pink wave (Lactarius torminosus), although the resemblance is purely superficial – the fragility of the structure, the weak pubescence of the cap, the yellowish plates and the leg, even in young specimens, do not allow you to make a mistake. The prickly lactiferous differs from other small lactifers of a similar color in the very distinct zoning of the cap: the dark red concentric zones on it are more pronounced than even those of the pink wave.

Nri:

A na-ewere ya dị ka ero anaghị eri nri. However, according to some authors, it is quite edible, suitable for pickles.

Nkume a-aza