Additional notes for sequences (bases on the right):
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Sep. 21, 2018.
No smell detected. Fungal, oily, bitter taste.
On well-rotted log under tulip poplar, dogwood, hickory, beech, maple.
Growing on rotting wood.
Conidiophores 35,7-49,1um.
Voucher 297 brown spore print
Growing among bamboos and close to a Hymenaea courbaril (Fabaceae) tree.
Elongated basidia, very small basidiospores m = 4.9 x 2.7 um, thin walled, smooth.
Hemimycena? Growing on mossy, living basswood tree beside elm/ash swamp. Microscopy - spores approx 6-6.5 x 3.6-4.5. Vouchered. JET220722_05
Growing on Claytonia caroliniana. Vouchered. JET230424_01
Mixed forest. On moss. Post drought (10 days after rain).
Growing on a leaf base, in a hole, under a log
Collection: FG0140
Strong smell of artificial berry/cherry(!?) like those smelly markers @leptonia
Caespitose on leaf litter and moss, needle duff, equine dung. Western red cedar base plus Doug fir and vaccinium spp.
Amanita pseudobreckonii-
Single fruiting body beneath Douglas fir and big leaf maple.
Cap: dull, honey yellow with soft easily removable cap patches.
Stem: Soft univeral veil material at top of compact bulb.
Volva is non limbate.
Harvested single specimen and dehydrated for herbarium collection.
My coinciding Mushroomobserver observation below-
Single fruiting beneath Douglas fir and big leaf maple.
Cap: dull yellow with soft flat universal veil remnants. Non angular warts.
Stem: non limbate volva. Bulb pointed at base. Soft veil tissue adhering to top of bulb.
Harvested single specimen and dehydrated for herbarium collection.
My coinciding Mushroomobserver observation below-
Either A. ravenelii from section Strobiliformes or A. rhopalopus from section Roanokenses. The UV on the cap was quite dry and difficult to differentiate. This is being sent out for sequencing.
Amanita sp at various stages
Amanita aurantiobrunnea, Upper Potaro River Basin, Guyana
Growing from soil in mixed woods. No discernible odor. Exannulate. Stipe equal, covered in orange powder. Thick velar patch.
Spores globose with a prominent hilar appendage. Large central guttule with granular material around it. Surface appears textured, but does not extend out from cell wall.
Micrographs mounted in distilled water at 1000x. Measurements: (10) 11-12 x (10) 11-12 Q= 1 - 1.09 (1.1) N= 20 Me= 11.3-11.1 Qe= 1
No volva. Bulbous. Yellowish cap. Mixed woods but directly under a red oak
Growing underwater in the river at a depth of about a third of a meter. Location was almost the same as a sighting from the previous week
Spores: (10.2) 10.3 - 11.5 (12.1) × (6.1) 6.3 - 6.65 (6.7) µm
Q = (1.6) 1.64 - 1.8 ; N = 9
Me = 11.1 × 6.5 µm ; Qe = 1.7
11.53 6.39
10.62 6.46
11.33 6.68
11.09 6.51
10.21 6.14
10.33 6.43
11.54 6.27
10.83 6.55
12.13 6.65
Lyophyllum "spring white" sensu J. Frank
AKA "pale white" sensu D. Miller
AKA "sp-PNW01" sensu S. Russell
AKA "Lyophyllum 'decastes PNW08'" not sure who added this provisional epithet.
Tracking loose synonymies.
on wet rotting log. Seems to be a layer of carbon fungus of some kind. Micro included - asci/paraphyses inseparable. Vouchered. JET231010_01
Odd Spindle shaped stem
Scaly cap that doesn’t seem to be only weathering
A bit of colour under the cuticle
Brought into ID clinic
A. elliptosperma complex based on the pink gill tint and appressed volval limbs on the base
Mixed woods. Hemlock. Populus. Vouchered. JET230731_07
Description:
Pileus: 19-30 mm; campanulate to convex, later with uplifted to revolute margin; smooth cuticle, sulcate with smooth centre; covered with floccose-filamentose velum, white of colour; dark grey with paler margin and darker reddish brown centre; hygrophanous.
Lamellae: Not very crowded when expanded, free, very narrow; grey at first, later black; entirely deliquescent.
Stipe: 38-58 × 1,5-2 mm; central, cilindrical, slightly tapering towards the pileus; longitudinally striate, densely covered with fibrillose squamules, denser towards the base, there with very dense fibrils and slight fibrillose annular zone; entirely white.
Context: Very thin; white, brownish in the foot and the centre of the pileus; hollow in the stipe.
Smell/Taste: Smells earthy; no taste recorded.
Microscopy:
Measurements (1000x, oil-immersion, H2O, 1 sd=1,02 micron):
8,16-9,18 × 5,10-6,12 micron.
Ecology: On small piece of burried broadleaf wood on very eutrophic, disturbed soil.
On branch attached to Eucalyptus log.
No smell detected.
Bibliografía y recomendaciones para tus registros. Las fotografías y descripciones que hagas, te van a permitir identificar el ejemplar.
Infografías Hongos de Colombia:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1tn-JDRz-_PIBXYJmyoyvY_IbIkbipGPf?usp=sharing
Más información en:
https://colombia.inaturalist.org/journal/teodoro_chivatabedoya/54937-registro-de-hongos-macromicetos
Bibliografía General de Macromicetos:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/19VZivWVc5ueyBABX73KIfBGei9smvMzh?usp=sharing
Otras recomendaciones en:
Grupo XYLARIA Hongos de Colombia ©2016
FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/groups/xylariahongosBogota/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/hongos_colombia/
On a Wild grapevine (Vitis sp)
RLC168; Photo by Michael Wherley; used with permission. Same as RLC166.
RLC703 Photo by Jesse McAlpine; used with permission. Collected by Jesse McAlpine
Not staining. This has the appearance of a Leucoagaricus but it is not. The gills are sinuate/adnate. The spores ianmyloid. Pileipellis is a cutis with erect terminal element, clamped. It has similar large and plentiful cheilo and pleurocystidia, tending to thick-walled. The sequence, and the micro-morphology, say this is an undescribed species of Albomagister. The macro-morphology is not like A. subaustralis.
In a hole, on conifer root
I'm honestly a little bit stumped with these. They are absolutely gorgeous. Found growing beneath mostly pine.
Large.
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Jun. 28, 2021.
Django Grootmyers on Mushroom Observer ID'd my observation there.
Pleasant watermelon rind smell that faded after picking.
Mainly hemlock; further away red oak, white oak, maple.
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Additional notes for sequences (bases on the right):
ITS: Sequenced by the Brandon Matheny lab
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Oct. 1, 2021.
On Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood)
Horak's G. excentrica. Not a great photo unfortunately. It is more closely related to Gymnopilus than Galerina
Under Douglas fir.
Spores measure (7.1) 7.4 – 8.5 (8.6) × (4.9) 5.1 – 5.5 (5.6) µm
Q = (1.3) 1.4 – 1.56 (1.6) ; N = 15
Me = 7.9 × 5.3 µm ; Qe = 1.5
On hardwood stick with Daedaleopsis confragosa, Panellus stipticus, and Calocera(?) under red oak, tulip poplar, beech, maple, sweetgum, white oak, hickory.
Growing on the side of a canyon, under bay and tan oak.
RLC761 Photo by Bryn Dentinger; used with permission. Collected by Bryn Dentinger & Tommy Jenkinson
RLC1689
Specimens collected, transported, deposited, duplicated, exported and DNA sequenced with the express, written permission of the Ministerio del Ambiente, Agua y Transición Ecológica (MAE) and the Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INaBio), in compliance with the Nagoya Protocol. Copies of permits available to select parties upon request.
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Additional specimens not added to iNat observation fields:
Herbario Nacional del Ecuador: RLC1689
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Feb. 16, 2022.
the most gregarious example of this species observed yet. growing singly but numerously in a roughly 10×10 meter area.
Substrate: in soil
Habitat: lowland tropical rain forest
Ecoregion: Southwest Amazon Moist Forests (NT0166)
Collectors: D. Newman, I. Cuba Pinto & P. Kaishian
Collection #: CHAL135
Collected during the 2017 SUNY-ESF Fungi of Bolivia Field Course & 2nd Field Workshop on Neotropical Polypores
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Apr. 22, 2022.
Found near Mirador el Roblar, El Sumidero
This collection represents a first country record of this species for Mexico, and only one of fewer than five records of the species away from the type locality in the Caribbean. The sequence is the first for this species (to our knowledge).