Violet colored, very shaggy, growing alone
First Observed: Aug 3, 2021 https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/89919915
Second Observed: Aug 17, 2021 https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/91582773
Cyptotrama asprata[syn C.chrysopepla].8602.20240111.dwb/alachua co. florida
Hair does not rub off. Basidiocarp is thin and even.
Bartam Trail, Franklin, NC
Found on stump of a cut tree.
Growing in wet, mossy, trail embankment soil
I think @corndog collected this
Not positive on this ID. Bit early for Pholiota, but this growing on barkless wood in a mixed forest. Didn't get a great pic of the gills because they were small, but they appear close, not crowded and whitish.
This one has a super scrobiculate stipe and is under Beech.
22714
Collected for the 2023 North American Mycological Association Annual Foray.
Collected on a foray with the New River Valley Mushroom Club.
Collected on a foray with the New River Valley Mushroom Club
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Image #1:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x
1/50 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Zerene Stacked with Zerene Stacker (40 Images)
Image #2:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/180 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Zerene Stacked with Zerene Stacker (7 Images)
Image #3:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/180 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Zerene Stacked with Zerene Stacker (5 Images)
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on May 15, 2019.
On hardwood bark in a mixed forest understory
in grass around Quercus palustris tree (E08-6)
Growing in mixed conifer forest under a yew tree. Pileus matte, powdery lipstick-brick red, with raggedy white veil tissue at margin. Lamellae reddish pink, free. Stripe fibrous, reddish with white scales, bruising dark red easily. K+ black, smell indistinct
Under some leaf litter on loamy soil
On 150+ year old Thuja plicata, KOH reaction red, red-orange (pictured in close up of collection)
Pores .75-1 per cm, with white sebiculum, microscopy pending
In sandy soil and pine duff under Pinus strobus. Smells like mushroom, like grocery store Agaricus.
Small white mushrooms were growing on decorticated hardwood log. Crowded and slimy on top.
Stuck to fallen leaves and limb of Tulipfera liriodendron. It seemed to act as an adhesion between the two.
Under white pine, maple and rhododendron. All white, cap to 2 cm. Very acrid after 5 seconds.
Seemed to be growing from the duff rather than directly from wood. Found in mixed hardwood/conifer forest.
Found by Victoria; SDNWR intern.
C. cf. muscigena?
Growing at the base of a Chamise
V120. Growing on a dead branch that was lying on the ground in a mesquite bosque at 3300 ft. in elevation. Each disk was smaller than my fingernail. Resembles Aleurodiscus, but I am not sure that is the ID.
the capped mushroom in with the sweetgum xylaria
Django working up microscopy and sequencing
Gregarious on thick sedge debris over peat in wet meadow, under Carex and Betula glandulosa. Spores small, white, smooth, ellipsoid, inamyloid. Photos taken in dark conditions — see tackle box photo for mostly accurate color
Growing on an old earth star!
Found under tomato plant in a huge clump. I don’t know the term but it feels hairy or moss like on the stem and cap and rubbed off on my fingers
Growing in a pile of wood chips
Clavulinopsis "sp-PA02"
DNA - ITS - Nanopore
Unbelievable check
Collected beneath the same tree as my other observation of this same species- https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/171660035
Seems to be prolific among the magnolia duff but does not appear to be infecting any other duff present.
parasitizing Cyclocosmia truncata.
See spider observation here:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/173218441
Growing in wet mixed duff. Some appeared to be emerging from Redwood needles, but difficult to determine. The first image shows some that were emerging from a rotten Rhododendron (?) twig. Other options are California-Bay Laurel (Umbellularia californica) and Coast Live Oak (Quercus agrifolia) leaves.
Golden-backed Frog
Mushroom grown on frog body
Barrio Río Cañas Abajo. Found in lower/mid elevation moist secondary forest on bank along side of trail under Myconia sp. shrub. Substrate appears to be seeds, but could be sclerotium. Perithecia are cone shaped bumps, some are dull and some come to a point giving the impression of spikes, perhaps depending on the stage of development.
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Image #1: 10x handlens
Image #2: 10x handlens
Image #4: 10x handlens
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Dec. 5, 2018.
Growing in moss on the bank of a creek (which had receded).
On White Oak (Quercus alba); in oak-hickory woods.
Very decayed wood. Fungus viewed on this dead tree for four years.