Wild ganoderma lucidum: covered with cork, with different shapes, the male and female plants growing together are similar in shape and rich in fragrance. Each
Wild ganoderma lucidum: covered with cork, with different shapes, the male and female plants growing together are similar in shape and rich in fragrance. Each cultivated Ganoderma lucidum has the same shape. When Ganoderma lucidum is immature, there is a pale yellow and white growth circle on the edge of the cap, which disappears and spews out spore powder when it is mature. Not all wild ganoderma lucidum have stipes, stipes or nearly sessile or sessile; Ganoderma lucidum has a stalk, and few of them are sessile or nearly sessile. Ganoderma lucidum stipe is reddish brown to black, with lacquer-like luster and hardness.
When the light is too low during the growth of Ganoderma lucidum, only stipes grow and do not open, such as antlers and Ganoderma lucidum. The lids of some wild Ganoderma lucidum have the luster of natural lacquer. After washing and drying, the mushroom lid will overflow with lacquered Ganoderma lucidum oil, with annular ribs and radial wrinkles. The size and morphology of wild ganoderma lucidum vary greatly. There are countless tiny tube holes on the back of fungi, and the nozzle is white or light brown. At the initial growth stage of Ganoderma lucidum, the back of the fungus is white at first glance, with 4 ~ 5 tube holes per millimeter, the nozzle is round and the inner wall is a seed layer. Ganoderma lucidum seeds (spores) are oval, with two walls, the size of a needle tip, brown and powdery.
Wild ganoderma lucidum grows naturally in the wild. There are more than 200 species in the world, but the most effective one is the "spirit of the forest" Ganoderma lucidum, which is called Ganoderma lucidum in Ganoderma lucidum, and its medicinal value is recognized by the world medicine. Ganoderma lucidum is an important family of higher fungi, which is widely distributed all over the world. Wild ganoderma lucidum, as its name implies, refers to pure natural ganoderma lucidum growing in the forest, as opposed to cultivated ganoderma lucidum. Sun Simiao, the king of medicine, called the wild Ganoderma lucidum found in the forest "Qiongzhen", and later called it Qiongzhen Ganoderma lucidum.
Wild ganoderma lucidum saprophytes on the roots or stems of broad-leaved trees such as oak trees. Due to massive deforestation, vegetation destruction, soil erosion and depletion of wild ganoderma lucidum resources, it can not meet the medical and edible needs. Ganoderma lucidum was cultivated artificially in China in 1950s, and it was successful.