peziza การใช้
- The species was first described by Giovanni Battista Balbis in 1804 as " Peziza amentacea ".
- It was first described in 1763 by German mycologist Jacob Christian Sch鋐fer as " Peziza auricula ".
- A faint hissing sound can also be heard for species of " Peziza " and other cup fungi.
- The closely related " Peziza praetervisa " is also violet-colored and prefers growing on burned ground.
- This species was originally described by Swedish mycologist Elias Magnus Fries in 1823 as " Peziza hemisphaerica ".
- The first fungi identified from the sub-antarctic islands was " Peziza kerguelensis ", which was described in 1847.
- It was first described in 1805 by Johannes Baptista von Albertini and Lewis David de Schweinitz as " Peziza clavus ".
- "Peziza " means a sort of mushroom without a root or stalk ( not accurate for P . repanda ); repanda means bent backwards.
- "Peziza praetervisa " is a widespread fungus that grows in scattered clusters on burned soil, and is often found on the remains of old campfires.
- In a 1987 publication, Donald Pfister placed " Peziza badioconfusa " in commonly known as the common brown cup, or the pig-ear cup.
- "Peziza cerea " can be initially identified by its growth in cellars, damp mortar, soil between pavement slabs, on rotting sandbags, plant material or manure.
- It is a monotypic genus, containing the single species " "'Rhodoscypha ovilla " "', originally described in 1876 by Charles Horton Peck as a species of " Peziza ".
- A 1996 study of British specimens of " Scutellinia " revealed that the species " S . crinita ", originally described as " Peziza crinita " in 1789 by French botanist Jean Baptiste Fran鏾is Pierre Bulliard, was synonymous with " S . scutellata ".
- "S . scutellata " was first described in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus in his book " Species Plantarum " as " Peziza scutellata ", and it was given its current name by Jean Baptiste 蒻il Lambotte in " Memoires societe royale des sciences de Liege " in 1887.
- Other mushrooms resembling " P . praetervisa " include " Peziza violacea ", which may be distinguished from the latter by its dark purple hymenium, and microscopically by its biguttulate warty ascospores . " Pachyella babingtonii " also has a purple brown hymenium, but is smaller, and translucent in appearance.