It is possible for mushrooms to grow behind your sink. Mushrooms will thrive in dump areas which provide the right conditions for them to grow.
Then you have a damp problem. Call a plumber.... it is important you get this seen to the fungus could do extensive damage to the house if you allow it to spread.
Can you
72 F
s sir , but not all of them some of them such as scottish fungi etc .. growth can be seen under a microscope Yes. If you have seen a mushroom growing in a field or garden then you have seen a fungi
primary producers
Not really, not in the sense of say a potted plant growing singly. Mushrooms emerge from the mass of mycelia under the soil as a fruiting body and so may form one at a time or in masses of fruiting bodies, depending upon growing conditions as well as the mushroom species.
yeah
I would think about giving that area a thorough cleaning
a mushroom growing kit
Mushroom Logs/Composts contains growing media/substrate inoculated with mushroom spawn. The white/brown material inside the bags is the "mycelium", which has "colonized" the growing media/substrate.
The form under the top of the mushroom.
It's the brown mushroom that you can get in the fall or by growing it in your mushroom house.
72 F
Saprophytism
Mycelium
Mushrooms grow on dead plant matter, such as fallen leaves, twigs and branches. They are saprophytes, which means that they digest decaying organic matter. This is why you will often find mushrooms growing in damp, dark areas, such as under trees or near compost heaps.
Never eat a mushroom growing wild unless you are a fungi expert or have a fungi expert with you.
This is a fairy ring. It is caused by the mushroom spreading out year by year.
Arthur John Simons has written: 'Mushroom growing' -- subject(s): Mushroom culture