Welcome to Mushroom World

Step into the enchanting world of fungi with Mushroom World – your trusted companion for learning about mushrooms.

Whether you're a curious beginner or a seasoned nature enthusiast, our site provides clear, accessible information and beautiful images to help you better understand and appreciate the mushrooms you encounter.

If you're curious about what fungi actually are, and how they differ from plants and animals, be sure to visit our what are fungi? page for an easy-to-understand explanation.

With thousands of mushroom species known to science, we've chosen to focus on the most common and easily recognisable ones. Each entry includes helpful descriptions, identification tips, and high-quality images, and we’re always working to expand our collection with new species and updated content.

Come and explore the wonders of mushrooms with us. We hope you find our site informative, inspiring, and a valuable resource on your journey of mushroom discovery.

What you can do on Mushroom World

Browse the database

Explore mushrooms from the alphabetical list or search by name or properties.

Identify a mushroom

Know some characteristics but not the name? Use our mushroom identification helper to narrow it down.

New to identification? Start with identification basics.

Test your knowledge

Try our identification quiz and see how many mushrooms you recognise. Each run gives you new questions.

Upload your photos

Have good mushroom photos to share? Use the upload form and we will see if we can include them on the site.

Today's Mushroom

A quick highlight from our database

Today's mushroom is Rubroboletus satanas (Satan's Bolete). It grows in Europe, (North America).

Dimensions: Cap 8-25 cm diameter, stem 6-9 cm tall * 5-10 cm diameter

Description: Rubroboletus satanas (formerly Boletus satanas), commonly known as Satan's Bolete, is a fleshy bolete with a smooth, bun-shaped cap that is almost white. It can be identified by its orange to blood-red pores and prominent yellow to blood-red net pattern. Additionally, it has a stout, yellow to red stem.

Cap compact, at first it is hemispheric with an inrolled margin, later flattening in the shape of a pad, and in older specimens, it is bent irregularly. The pileus at first greyish white, later more greenish ochre or leather colour. The surface of the cap is finely tomentose, later smooth, and often slightly sticky in wet weather. Pores are small, circular, and red, sometimes blood-red, but orange at the margin. The free to slightly adnate tubes are yellow then olive, blue were cut. Stem yellow background covered with a hexagonal close-meshed net that starts bright red and turns dark blood-red. Often very bulbous and usually wider than it is long. When young almost spherical. Spore print olivaceous brown.

Microscopic Features: The spores are subfusiform, measuring 9.5-15 x 4.5-7µm.

Note: In North America, another bolete known as Satan's Bolete, with red pores and red stems, is sometimes referred to as Boletus satanas. The European species is unlikely to be found in America, but a similar bolete called Rubroboletus eastwoodiae, also known as Satan's Bolete, does exist there.

Rubroboletus satanas on the www.first-nature.com web site.

Photos by Holger Krisp and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.

This site contains no information about the edibility or toxicity of the mushroom.

If you are interested in this mushroom, look it up in our database for more detailed photographs and additional information.

Rubroboletus satanas Rubroboletus satanas

Many mushrooms are poisonous, and some can be lethally toxic. Distinguishing between edible and poisonous mushrooms can be very challenging. Therefore, we strongly advise against consuming wild mushrooms. This website does not contain any information about the edibility or toxicity of mushrooms.

Although efforts have been made to ensure accuracy on this website, the information may contain errors and omissions. Therefore, all content provided is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be relied upon or used as a basis for consuming any plants or mushrooms.

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