You have to catch a few paras or parasects. There is a chance that they have a small mushroom or a big mushroom on them. After you've caught them, you can simply remove the mushroom from them and put it in your bag, thus enabling you to go to the man at 2 island and get him to teach your Pokemon moves.
Sidenote: I think it is only parasect that carries the big mushrooms. (But it is more likely that you get a small mushroom from it too. The big mushrooms are pretty rare).
You could catch a paras. It has a 50% for holding a tinymushroom or a parascet for a bigmushroom
usually you can find them all over the game, but most of the time you first catch a paras or a parasect, and it probably be holding something. it will be either a tiny mushroom or a big mushroom.
The setting is Green Gables, a fictional farm in Avonlea. Avonlea is set on Prince Edward Island in Canada.
It is on Prince Edward Island in Canada
Anne of Green Gables main setting is on the beautiful Prince Edward Island, Canada.
The green mushroom on the Super Mario Bros game is a 1-up mushroom. This mushroom gives an extra life to Mario. These mushrooms are rare to find in the game.
You can find green mushrooms in henesys, ellinia
The differences are that: 1.Plants make their own food while mushroom does not.
There are different coloured mushrooms that you can collect in Super Mario Bros. The red mushroom will make you larger. The green mushroom will give you 1Up - which is another life.
No. Mushrooms grow in the dark as well. Potatoes, beats, carrots, too. Take mushrooms, for example. Mushrooms do not need sunlight, like other green plants. A mushroom breathes in oxygen, just like humans do. Thus, a mushroom only needs oxygen to keep growing, and good soil to grow in.
AgaricalesTypical mushrooms are the fruit bodies of members of the order Agaricales, whose type genus is Agaricus and type species is the field mushroom, Agaricus campestris.From Wikipedia
The mushroom and the green plant
Mushrooms are fungi, not plants, and they obtain their nutrients through absorption rather than photosynthesis like green plants. This means they do not require sunlight to grow and lack chlorophyll. Additionally, mushrooms reproduce using spores instead of seeds.
If you are doing a field-op then go to the beach there will be a mushroom at your right. Go there and your spy phone will turn green. You do the mission and you will get a medal.
Plants have green leaves because they contain chlorophyll, which is used to perform photosynthesis. Mushrooms are not plants, they are fungi, and do not perform photosynthesis -- they gain their energy from decomposing matter instead -- so they do not need green leaves.
The only green mushroom I've heard of is the Parrot Wax Cap, which I believe is native to Great Britain. Perhaps they are common there? Most mushrooms are whitish to brown, although there are some colorful ones which are red or orange. Why green, is a little harder to answer. Fungus, of course, doesn't produce chlorophyll, nor does fungus need to blend in with its surroundings since the mushroom is not vital to the life of the fungus. The mushroom is merely used to spread its spores, and typically only survives a couple of days, while the main body of the fungus - the mycelia - lives underground. Bright colors can attract birds and insects, helping to spread the spores. Perhaps you are thinking of green mold? Molds get their color from their spores, and the spores get their color from quinones. Again, bright colors can attract insects and birds, helping to spread spores.
That would be the 1-up mushroom.