Stamp: Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum) (Greece, Mount Athos 2010)

Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum) (Greece, Mount Athos 2010)

16 November (Greece, Mount Athos ) within release Flora and Fauna (IV) goes into circulation Stamp Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum) face value 3.50 Euro

Stamp Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum) in catalogues
Michel: Mi: GR-MA 65
WADP Numbering System - WNS: WAD: XK 020.10

Stamp is vertical format.

Also in the issue Flora and Fauna (IV):

Data entry completed
93%
Stamp Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum) in digits
Country: Greece, Mount Athos
Date: 2010-11-16
Print: Offset lithography and Hot stamping
Size: 27 x 40
Perforation: comb 13
Emission: Commemorative
Format: Stamp
Face Value: 3.50 Euro
Print run: 70000

Stamp Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum) it reflects the thematic directions:

A mushroom (or toadstool) is the fleshy, spore-bearing fruiting body of a fungus, typically produced above ground on soil or on its food source. The standard for the name "mushroom" is the cultivated white button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus; hence the word "mushroom" is most often applied to those fungi (Basidiomycota, Agaricomycetes) that have a stem (stipe), a cap (pileus), and gills (lamellae, sing. lamella) on the underside of the cap. These gills produce microscopic spores that help the fungus spread across the ground or its occupant surface. "Mushroom" describes a variety of gilled fungi, with or without stems, and the term is used even more generally, to describe both the fleshy fruiting bodies of some Ascomycota and the woody or leathery fruiting bodies of some Basidiomycota, depending upon the context of the word. Forms deviating from the standard morphology usually have more specific names, such as "bolete", "puffball", "stinkhorn", and "morel", and gilled mushrooms themselves are often called "agarics" in reference to their similarity to Agaricus or their order Agaricales. By extension, the term "mushroom" can also designate the entire fungus when in culture; the thallus (called a mycelium) of species forming the fruiting bodies called mushrooms; or the species itself.

Flora is the plant life occurring in a particular region or time, generally the naturally occurring or indigenous—native plant life. The corresponding term for animal life is fauna. Flora, fauna and other forms of life such as fungi are collectively referred to as biota. Sometimes bacteria and fungi are also referred to as flora, as in the terms gut flora or skin flora.

Stamp, Spiny Puffball (Lycoperdon echinatum), Greece, Mount Athos,  , Mushrooms, Plants (Flora)