The shape is not determined by edibility, such as prova or toxic Amanita muscaria.
Many people have incorrect ideas about the differences between cogumelos and cogumelos, and this can cause many problems if hunters who love cogumelos are formed. Some say that the main difference is that cogumelos are all poisonous versions of cogumelos, while cogumelos are not poisonous. Isso é incorrect, meanwhile, and can cause serious problems for a hunter of cogumelos. In reality, there is no real scientific difference between cogumelos and cogumelos, and the names are basically interchangeable.
Technically, there is no difference between cogumelos and cogumelos.
These mushrooms classified as mushrooms may not be toxic, or just moderate, and many mushrooms are deadly. Many times it is not possible to say that a cogumelo is edible (unless you are buying in a supermarket) based only on appearance, therefore, unless a person sees a specialist. In general, people should never eat wild mushrooms, unless a professional mushroom hunter endorses you.
It can be difficult to assess whether a mushroom is edible solely on the basis of appearance.
Some people define poisonous cogumelo as any fungus that does not have a layer located in the center, does not have a caule or does not have “war” embedded in the layer. In truth, the fungi commonly found in wood can be identified as cogumelos, such as polyps, still are cogumelos, but do not have caules. These, however, like the Trametes versicolor, which look like little rainbows and often grow at the bottom of trees or on fallen logs, may be called cogumelos to distinguish the two cogumelos that are more typically “corn-shaped”. eat it”. This distinction from a scientific point of view is not correct.
Many edible and poisonous mushrooms seem similar to untrained eyes.
Others define certain fungi that have the form of cogumelo such as cogumelos, among them, or fly agaric or Amanita muscaria, a cogumelo with vermelho caule that is poisonous and has hallucinogenic properties if ingested. The main distinction here is the degree of toxicity. Again, this cogumelo, is bright green with white balls on the top, looks very much like the shape of a cogumelo and resembles those forms of cogumelo that people can buy in a supermarket.
What remains important about cogumelos and cogumelos are the following facts:
They are the same and there is no scientific distinction between them. They cannot be defined by shape, color or appearance, once there is no standard differentiation between them. You don’t eat them with hats and caules, while you eat them don’t have caps and caules. Fungi are not defined by level of toxicity: anything classified as being non-toxic, slightly toxic, hallucinogenic or extremely poisonous. As people should never consume anything classified as cogumelo or cogumelo without first being examined by a professional cogumelo hunter.