From The Great Encyclopedia of Mushrooms written by Jean-Louis Lamaison and Jean-Maria Poles, "The horse mushroom grows in fields and pastures, and sometimes in heather."
Macaroni Penguins live in cold environments such as the Antarctica. They can also live in rocky environments such as Falkland Island.
Protists can live in a large range of environments, including what are known as "extreme" environments. But most protists live in moist/ damp environments like ponds, swamps, lakes, creeks, that kind of thing.
Some common mushrooms found in grasslands include fairy ring mushrooms, meadow mushrooms, and field blewits. These mushrooms typically grow in open grassy areas where there is plenty of sunlight and moisture. It is important to properly identify wild mushrooms before consuming them as some can be toxic.
Termites live in colonies underground or in wood structures. They thrive in warm, humid environments and are commonly found in tropical and subtropical regions.
The Bioluminescent Mushroom lives underwater.
Mushrooms live in moist areas and regions that don't have much sunlight
Moist environments with leaves(grass) sticks
Halophiles live in environments with high salt concentrations, such as salt flats, salt mines, and saline lakes. They are able to thrive in these extreme conditions because they have adapted mechanisms to cope with the high salt levels.
Horses are found in a wide variety of environments, from the flat cold tundra scape of Iceland to the great deserts of Egypt and everywhere else in between except the extreme ice-covered regions of the Arctic and Antarctic.
Mushrooms
Cold, long winters and short days.
Some common mushrooms found in temperate grasslands are meadow mushrooms (Agaricus campestris), fairy ring mushrooms (Marasmius oreades), and horse mushrooms (Agaricus arvensis). These mushrooms thrive in the open grassy areas and are often edible. However, caution should always be taken when foraging for wild mushrooms as some species can be toxic.