Armillaria gallica is a types of nectar mushroom in the family Physalacriaceae. It is a typical and environmentally essential wood-rot growth that can eat dead natural material in soil, or live as a deft parasite in debilitated tree hosts to cause root or butt spoil. It is found in mild locales of Asia, North America, and Europe. The yellow-dark colored mushrooms, secured with little scales, can develop to around 10 cm (4 in) in measurement. On the underside of the tops are gills that are white to rich or light orange. The parasite has been the subject of significant logical research into its part as a plant pathogen, its capacity to bioluminesce, its abnormal life cycle, and its capacity to frame vast and seemingly perpetual settlements. A 1,500-year-old settlement was found in the mid 1990s out of a Michigan timberland, answered to cover a zone of 15 hectares (37 sections of land) and weigh no less than 9,500 kilograms (21,000 lb); as a vacation destination called the "humungous organism", it rouses a yearly mushroom-themed celebration in