Mushrooms?

Discussion in 'NEW Gardeners !' started by Starzy84, Aug 20, 2023.

  1. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    If it's those dark crusty things it's probably liverworts. I get them if the weather has been wet, they look a bit slimy and black when actively growing. Get a bit of sun and they dry out and die.
     
    Last edited: Aug 22, 2023
  2. Clueless 1 v2

    Clueless 1 v2 Total Gardener

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    Are they unaffected by the toxins?
     
  3. burnie

    burnie Total Gardener

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    Nature has evolved to allow many species to eat things poisonous to us, birds can eat the berries from a Yew tree for example, we would be extremely poorly if we tried it.
     
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      Last edited: Aug 22, 2023
    • JWK

      JWK Gardener Staff Member

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      Ricinus communis is classified as the most poisonous plant on earth for humans, slugs ate a self sown one a few weeks ago in my garden.
       
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      • Clueless 1 v2

        Clueless 1 v2 Total Gardener

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        I know. Slugs I'm not surprised about. They're nothing but mobile bogies. They're designed to be disgusting. But rabbits I thought had digestive tracts and nervous systems not entirely disimilar to us.
         
      • burnie

        burnie Total Gardener

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        As a gardener you must know Rabbits will absolutely anything we don't want them to eat..................................
         
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        • JWK

          JWK Gardener Staff Member

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          I wouldn't class rabbit"s digestion as similar to me as they practice coprophagy :poo:
           
        • NigelJ

          NigelJ Total Gardener

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          Yew leaves are posinous as are the seeds, but I believe the flesh around the seed is safe; not going to recommend.
          There is quite a lot of variation among mammals as to what's toxic and what isn't. This why rats and miceare not necessarily good test animals for new drugs and other chemicals and hence the need for some things to be tried in primates and in people.
          Something regularly munches my Aconitum species, suspect slugs.
           
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          • pete

            pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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            I used to often find regurgitated yew seeds when walking in the park.
            Judging by the size of the amount I always thought it was foxes who ate the seeds with the red arils attached and then brought up the poisonous part afterwards.
            I could be wrong, perhaps it was rabbits, but some kind of animal was doing it, probably mountain lions or hummingbirds if i look on the internet. :biggrin:
             
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            • Sheal

              Sheal Total Gardener

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              As others have said here Clueless, rabbits are a real possibility. I've seen chunks eaten out of the fungi here but not by rabbits. I have the occasional hare in the garden though.
               
            • infradig

              infradig Total Gardener

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              Hare today, gone tomorrow..?
               
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              • JWK

                JWK Gardener Staff Member

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                That's bunny
                 
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                • NigelJ

                  NigelJ Total Gardener

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                  "Bugs Funny"
                   
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                  • Fof

                    Fof Gardener

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                    As a small kid, I clearly remember tucking into Yew berries from the Yew in the local graveyard. I must have instinctivly known not to eat the seed, just the aril, as I'm still here.
                    I still do when I see them.
                     
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