On soil and moss, or perhaps very decayed woody debris? on mossy subalpine lakeshore
spores 8.3-10.2 x 4.8-5.8
M3471
On wood debris under mix conifers. These are small, about 4 cms.
Spore print light brown.
Spores oval or elliptic, (5.5 - 6.7) x (3.8 - 4.2) ; Q=1.50
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 around a boggy pond edge between Sphagnum patches among Bog St. John's wort, another bog specific species Galerina paludosa nearby. Nearby plant species are Willow, Sugar pine, Pacific silver fir and Spirea.
Urban
Dome cap, entirely pruinose stipe, stem bulb
Fairly nodulose spores, skinny metuloids (upper body)
Growing on an old stump near Mycena epipterygia
Pleasant mushroom smell, buttery taste. Bottom half of stipe has bluish color with that part mainly under the moss. Growing from moss transplanted 2 years ago into a garden.
Cap faded to light tan once dry, bluing more pronounced. Last photo is 12hrs after picking.
ID from: https://m.facebook.com/groups/MushID/permalink/2242654845918733/?mibextid=Nif5oz
Golden-backed Frog
Mushroom grown on frog body
Spore deposit pink-salmon. Spores 5-sided, 8.5 μm.
ITS sequenced by Matt Gordon / Molecular Solutions.
Growing on a split rail fence.
Sweet earthy smell and mild sweet taste.
Growing on a conifer log.
Sweet earthy smell and taste.
Maybe Hohenbuehelia auriscalpium like this one?:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/145630874
More discussion and information here:
https://m.facebook.com/groups/PNWMushroomID/permalink/2405777819581030/?sfnsn=mo&ref=share&mibextid=VhDh1V
UVF 365 nm = gills yellow green to pink, both weakly. yellow on stipe right before it hits gills
KOH = yellow on cap
did not bleed
Very small, largest caps ~1cm.
Consistent white cap/orange gills. Growing on a large hemlock stump
thick walled, amyloid, spiny globose spores about 7microns. In swampy area on muck. Very tough and fibrous compared to e.g mycena, with prominent pointy umbo on mature specimens
Maybe? Unclear if that species occurs in the PNW, but it has a brown spore print (browner in real life than in pics) on overlapping caps and distinct stipes. In coastal area with primarily Sitka spruce and some western hemlock.
Spores more or less round, spiny, 4-5 microns. Pics of cheilocystidia in photos.
Single fruiting body with half a cap. In swampy area on edge of fen
suggested new species: protubera cerebrum
Pholiota pinguis?; associated with Alder; spores 6.7-8.2 x 4.4-4.8 um.
On dung, appendiculate, small annulus, stem apex diffrent from lower part.