Fungi Garden Mac OS

  1. Fungi Garden Mac Os X
  2. Fungi Garden Mac Os 11
  3. Fungi Garden Mac Os Download

Quick facts

Mac

Artistas com a letra F no site VAGALUME. Nidulariaceae is a family of fungi most commonly found growing on wood, including mulch piles. The fruiting bodies of these fungi are characteristically cup, or nest, shaped, and contain spore packets that are dispersed by ra.

  • Slime molds are present in all soils.
    • They are common on decaying logs, fallen leaves, mulch, lawns with excessive thatch and on strawberry leaves.
    • Control is not usually necessary and they will disappear during hot, dry weather.
  • Stinkhorns can be found in lawns, around the base of dead trees, or in flowerbeds mulched with wood chips.
    • They are commonly found near uprooted trees, near decayed logs or in humus.
    • They are produced during wet, cool periods in late summer and fall.
    • They are not harmful and no control is necessary.
  • Bird's nest fungi, sphere throwers, and shotgun fungi all grow on manure or decaying wood.
  • Since these fungi live only on decaying plant matter, they do not harm living plants.

Slime molds

In North America, there are hundreds of species of slime molds. In any one location, there can be up to 50 different kinds.

  • Although typically classified as fungi, slime molds are unique in their development.
  • Slime molds survive winter in soil and thatch layers as spores.
  • During cool, wet weather, spores germinate and produce single-celled amoeba-like spores (swimming spores).
  • The spores feed on microorganisms and organic matter until something causes them to join together.

These aggregations, called plasmodia, move up out of the soil onto the surface of mulch, wood chips, grass blades and plant stems. Plasmodia usually appear as white, yellow, gray, or purplish-brown, jelly-like masses. As plasmodia dry, they appear crusty and powdery.

Later, crusty reproductive structures called sporangia form. Spores produced from these structures are spread by wind, water, equipment, people or animals. Spore dispersal is aided by the height gained on grass blades or plant stems.

Slime molds are not parasitic, so they do not cause plant disease. But heavy coverage on grass or plant leaves may cause yellowing.

  • Control is not usually necessary and slime molds will disappear during hot, dry weather.
  • Slime molds may be washed, brushed or raked from affected areas.
  • Frequent mowing will quickly remove these fungi on rapidly growing grass.

Stinkhorns

Several different kinds of stinkhorns can be found in Minnesota.

  • Stinkhorns can be found in lawns, around the base of dead trees, or in flowerbeds mulched with wood chips.
  • In the woods, they are commonly found near uprooted trees, near decayed logs or in humus.
  • They are usually produced during wet, cool periods in late summer and fall.
  • They are not harmful, and no control is necessary.

Young stinkhorns develop within a round or flattened egg, one to three inches in diameter, which may be white, pink, lilac or beige. Do not eat stinkhorn eggs.

Cutting through a mature egg will reveal a fully developed mushroom cap with spores. Eventually, the mushroom stalk, also inside the egg, elongates. Under ideal conditions, stalks may elongate in as little as one half-hour.

Fungi Garden Mac Os X

The tip of the horn or cap is often covered with green, sticky slime that has a bad odor. This slime contains sticky spores and attracts flies that spread the fungal spores.

The fully developed fruiting body may range from 6 to 10 inches in height and is more or less horn shaped.

Bird's nest fungi, sphere throwers and shotgun fungi

Bird's nest fungi (Mycocalia, Nidularia, Nidula, Cyathus, and Crucibulum spp.), sphere throwers (Sphaerobolus spp.), and shotgun fungi (Pilobolus spp.) are three separate groups of fungi with many similarities.

They are all saprophytes, which grow on manure or decaying wood. Since these fungi live only on decaying plant matter, they do not harm living plants.

In the garden, the tiny fungi (under 1/4 inch tall) are usually found on the surface of soil that has been enriched with manure, sawdust or wood chips. They can also be found on old boards used to edge garden beds and on wooden plant labels and stakes.

The fungi are usually spread in manure, but some species may contaminate seed mixes.

All of these fungi can forcibly eject their spores in hard egg-like structures called peridioles. These structures can be ejected 3 feet or more. The sticky spore cases adhere to plant leaves and other surfaces, including home siding and patio furniture.

These fungi are rarely noticed unless they are brought indoors on container-grown plants. The first sign is shiny black or dark brown growths that look like seeds or insects on the leaves. These are the egg-like structures that have been ejected by the fungi. They can be picked off the leaves.

To help control these fungi, remove any fungal fruiting bodies from the surface of the soil. Repot the plant in a potting medium that does not contain manure or wood to prevent the fungi from returning.

Bird's nest fungi

  • Look like miniature bird's nests or cups.
  • Shiny peridioles are nestled inside like eggs.
  • Usually only 1/4 inch in height or diameter.
  • Commonly light brown but may be white, gray, yellow or rust colored.
  • The shiny peridioles are generally black or dark brown but may also be white.
  • Immature fruiting bodies look like tiny puffballs, which open into cups as they mature.

The peridioles of bird's nest fungi are splashed out of the nest by falling water drops. The dimensions and shape of the nest are such that the force of a water drop hitting the bottom of the cup is enough to throw the peridioles over one yard from the nest.

  • When a peridiole hits a solid object such as a leaf or twig, it sticks to the surface in one of two ways. Fungi in the genera Mycocalia, Nidularia and Nidula have sticky peridioles.
  • In the genera Cyathus and Crucibulum, the peridiole is attached to the nest by a coiled cord. When the peridiole is ejected from the nest, the cord separates from the nest, giving the peridiole a four-inch tail. The end of the tail is sticky. When it sticks to a twig or stem, the peridiole swings around its anchor point, wrapping the cord around the stem.

Most bird's nest fungi in Minnesota belong to Cyathus or Crucibulum.

Sphere throwers (Sphaerobolus spp.)

  • Grow on rotting wood in many of the same places as bird's nest fungi.
  • The whitish or yellowish-pink immature fruiting bodies are round balls similar to immature bird's nest fungi.
  • As the fruiting bodies mature, the outer layer of the ball peels back to form a cup with a single round peridiole inside. This cup is actually two cups, one inside the other, joined at the rim.
  • Pressure builds up between the two cups, eventually causing the inner cup to explosively invert, or turn inside out.
  • The force of the inversion launches the peridiole, which can travel more than five yards before sticking to any surface it impacts.

Shotgun fungi (Pilobolus spp.)

  • Grow mostly on old horse manure.
  • Clear, glasslike fruiting body consists of a slender stalk topped with a swollen bulb.
  • A shiny black peridiole rests on top of the bulb.

Pilobolus bends toward the light, which ensures the clearest path for the peridiole to travel. The fungus senses the direction of the light with light sensitive pigments at the base of the bulb. As long as these pigments are illuminated, they send a signal to bend. The bending stops when the opaque peridiole is pointing directly at the light source, shading the pigments.

If grown in the dark, the stalks will all point straight up. The swollen bulb is filled with sugar, which absorbs water until the pressure inside the bulb is five times the pressure outside. As the fruiting body matures, the walls weaken under the peridiole. Eventually the pressure causes the bulb to rupture, sending the sticky peridiole flying.

These ballistic fungi, each with its unique method of spore dispersal, can be a fascinating introduction to the world of fungi. A careful search of the damp corners of your garden in the fall will probably reveal numerous bird's nest fungi, sphere throwers and shotgun fungi.

Reviewed in 2018

This page is a wiki. Please login or create an account to begin editing.


Emulation's fun! - Happy Mac

Welcome to the Guides intro to Emulation.

Below, are instructions and links that will show you how to run games
that you will find located in the Macintosh Garden's pages.

  1. Selecting an Emulator
  2. The Guides

Introduction to Emulation

Macintosh Garden features many abandonware games. These games can be decades old, and therefore were developed for computers and operating systems that are now obsolete. As a consequence, many of the games featured on Macintosh Garden will not work on today's computers. The best way to run these games is to acquire a vintage computer system, but this is not always easy. To help those without old hardware, this wiki will describe how to use emulators to play the games on modern systems.

Selecting an Emulator

For best results you should try to emulate the machine that your game was designed for! Check the publishing date of the game for hints. Any host system can run an emulator. This means that users of Mac OS X, Windows, Linux and even more esoteric operating systems can all enjoy the games on Macintosh Garden. The four main emulators you will use are:

QEMU

Emulates a PowerPC Macintosh that will run Mac OS versions 9.0.4 to 10.5.

SheepShaver

Emulates a PowerPC Macintosh that will run Mac OS versions 7.5.2 to 9.0.4. This means that you are emulating a Macintosh setup that was commonly used from about 1995 to 2000. Games published in the late 90s are most stable in SheepShaver. Games that require a PowerPC processor will only run in SheepShaver.Skip to the guides for SheepShaver

Basilisk II

Basilisk II emulates a 680x0 Macintosh that will run Mac OS versions 7 to 8.1. This represents a date range of about 1991 to 1998. Games published in the early and mid 1990s are most stable in Basilisk II.Skip to the guides for Basilisk II

Mini vMac

Games published in the 1980s will usually run best in Mini vMac. Mini vMac emulates a black and white (only) Mac Plus (68000 processor) that can run System versions 1 to 7.5.5. (Work is being done on Mac II support, including color, in Mini vMac with a large number of possible variations.) This represents a date range of about 1984 to 1996.Skip to the guides for Mini vMacKeep in mind that there is a lot of backwards compatibility in Mac OS. SheepShaver and Mac OS 9 run a lot of games from the 1980s and early 1990s, and Basilisk II runs many 1980s games with no problems.

The Guides

Setting up an emulator is easy, and there is a wealth of setup guides available to help you out. Keep in mind that before you begin, you will need a valid Macintosh ROM image to run an emulator. You can get this from your old Macintosh computer, if you own one. Otherwise one will have to be acquired elsewhere, e.g.; from friends, family members, or online searches.You'll also need a copy of an old version of Mac OS to run in your emulator. Versions 6 to 7.5.5 are available for free and the guides below will show you where to get them and how to use them. Later versions (useful mostly in SheepShaver) were not free, so you will either need to buy a disc from somewhere or check through the apps section of this website for a suitable copy.

Fungi Garden Mac Os 11

For Mini vMac

  • Mini vMac is the easiest of the emulators to get started with. Most users can just check out the official documentation and should be up and running without too much effort.
  • Windows users can check out an illustrated setup guide.
  • iPhone users can also run Mini vMac. Check out the official page of that port for more information.

For Basilisk ll

  • E-Maculation has a setup guide for Mac OS X users, and another guide for Windows users, and another here for users of the Linux port of Basilisk II.
  • Linux users can also consult the official documentation (Web archive link: site currently off-line).

For SheepShaver

  • Low End Mac has a concise setup guide for OS X users. Note: If you are following this guide, please first download a more recent version of SheepShaver.
  • For more advanced issues, Emaculation.com has a more detailed guide and a forum dedicated to setting up SheepShaver for OS X.
  • Emaculation.com also has a setup guide for Windows users.
  • The WordPerfect Mac Yahoo group has complete installs of SheepShaver for Intel Macs. No other software needed. Free at WPMac.
  • Linux can consult the Ubuntu setup guide for help.

For QEMU

  • Emaculation.com also has setup guides for Mac OS X users as well as for Windows users.

Fungi Garden Mac Os Download

Downloading games from this website

Most games featured on Macintosh Garden are archived in the .SIT format. This format is ideal for extracting on Mac OS 9 and earlier - where you will be running your games. On Mac OS X you can extract these files using StuffIt Expander.

Uploading games to this website

This topic is a guide itself, please read A Beginner's Guide for Uploading Stuff to Macintosh Garden and Uploading games to this website.If you just want to upload a game, simply create an account and login, then when you click the add game link located at the top right of the website, a form will allow you to enter the new game's details; Game name, file, description, screenshot etc.

FAQ

What is a ROM? - A 'ROM' image is a file that is created by reading the contents of an Integrated Circuit which is installed in the Macintosh that the file is read from. The ROM file contains data about the exact model, it also contains copyrighted data from Apple. It is vital that you have a ROM file from the exact model of Macintosh that you wish to emulate.I don't have an old version of Mac OS? 7.5.x will run most games on Macintosh Garden and is good for Mini vMac and Basillisk II. Later and even earlier versions may be available in the apps section of this site.How do I add a page to this wiki?You must first create an account with us. Once logged in, click the 'Add page' link shown at the top right of this website.

Installing games/other software onto your emulator

A guide on installing apps on Mini vMac, Basilisk II, and SheepShaver is here. Feel free to improve it!