No, but it certainly helps.
First of all, you should not need to know how many spores are needed to grow "magic mushrooms" but it would be the same as for regular mushrooms. As mushrooms are a fungus, they can grow from only one spore..
The ones that make you trip(halucenate) there the best ones safe to eat don't eat when wet or molded the will leave u severly I'll and possibly die dry them out a dehumidifier is good them eatt them about and 8th of an ounce is good for one person all night
all mushrooms are magic mushrooms! but if were talkin real life wize no, these mushrooms are very uncommon and related to the boncufis gump species. these are very toxic and have been known to grow in many different circumstances.
Gypsy mushrooms do not grow in tundra's. They prefer temperate climates and all mushrooms require moisture in order for them to grow.
Many mushrooms need light to grow, and this includes nearly all edible types that are grown for sale in stores. It happens that the type that is most often sold, button mushrooms, is usually grown in the dark, and this variety includes Crimimi and Portobello mushrooms. Interestingly enough, however, mushrooms exposed to sunlight produce vitamin D, and this is especially true of button mushrooms. A person can get all the vitamin D needed each day by exposing a small button mushroom to sunlight for an hour or so and eating it.
No, not all cow patties produce magic mushrooms. The conditions must be right for the mushrooms to grow, and mushroom spores must be introduced into the cow patty in some way, such as by wind dispersal.
Some do, others need wood, others need straw, others need grain, etc. It all depends on the species of the mushroom producing fungus.
Mushrooms grow from spores that develop into mycelium, which is the vegetative part of a fungus. The mycelium then forms the mushroom fruiting body that we commonly see above ground. Mushrooms typically require specific temperature, humidity, and substrate conditions to grow successfully.
I just came from my outhouse, and yes, there were mushrooms growing out of all the human feces in there. They were big ones.
No, there are many species of magic mushrooms, many of which do not grow on dung at all. For example, several species of the genus Psilocybe grow on decaying wood, not cow dung.
Mushrooms are grown in almost every country. There is no data on the exact country of origin and the fungus can be found in all but the coldest climates. If you are wondering about one specific type of mushroom, you need to ask that in the question so we can answer it.
To a certain extent yes. Normally they grow around it, not actually in it. I would stay away from small mushrooms growing around it though. Not all mushrooms are edible. Not all are psychedelic. Some are just plain poisonous. Catastrophic liver failure might result from eating various mushrooms. Permanent Brain-damage might result from eating psychedelic mushrooms.