First, you need a substrate, which is a bed of organic matter with nutrients that are specific to the mushroom species you wish to grow. Second, you need spores that come from a mushroom of that species. Third, you need the right conditions, such as temperature and humidity, for the spore to begin growing fungus on the substrate. Once the fungus matures, it will begin growing a mushroom to reproduce more spores. Once the mushroom matures, the spores will be released from underneath the mushroom cap.
Mushrooms containing psilocybin.
Mushrooms do not produce their own food, they live off the decay of other organisms.
Never
they use spores
Growing mushrooms typically does not produce a strong smell. However, some varieties of mushrooms may have a mild earthy or mushroomy scent as they grow.
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.
mushrooms
Mushrooms have been shown to produce vitamin D when exposed to UV. Eat mushrooms.
A mushroom reproduces in many manners, including asexually. Spores are the structures that mushrooms produce in order to send reproductive signals to other mushrooms.
yes
The red mushrooms will usually produce honey.
Sugar, maybe, as a byproduct of decomposition but not oxygen. Enoki mushrooms are heterotrophic organisms. They are unable to produce their own food via photosynthesis (or chemosynthesis). They are more likely to consume sugars and oxygen than produce them.