Found on small branch/stick near riverbed in jungle. Cap up to 1mm, white, cup shaped, smooth, stipe wiry, 3-7mm, fragile. Very small size makes it difficult to photograph
Fruiting singly/in pairs in large numbers on mixed hardwood twigs; Cap bright orange, 15-35mm; Gills bright orange, adnexed to free, and distantly spaced; Stipe orange, darkening with age, 15-45mm
MO Observation 477685
White smooth fungal mass growing through forest floor and engulfing sticks/leaves/coconut/plant material; occasionally forming branched projections/structures; difficult to measure size but branched structures usually 2-4cm tall; Rubbery texture; sometimes with purple or orange coloration/bruising
MO Observation 478428
found fully underwater in snowmelt stream coming down mountain
On undetermined old wood in a coniferous forest with nearby mountain alder. Odor mild, taste fungoid. spore print white. spores 5-8 x 2-2.75
ITS sequence shows it's a Squamanita but there is no close match to existing records in Genbank.
The host is Amanita canescens and is a separate entry in iNaturalist (200288206)!
Found in gully on wet ground near stream under nettle, mixed hardwood/conifer forest, dark granules on pileus surface (see macro photos), mostly washed away
Pore surface pictures aren’t very clear at all, and are shadowed however in person they were very clearly fresh and living pore surfaces, and were dark grey in color. They also smelled very strongly, as sweet fruit-floral an odor as you can get while also having the regular “mushroom smell” somewhere too.
Shrooms of some sort - Izaak Walton Wetlands
Field photos (c) 2019 Ethan Disbrow
Found in gully on wet ground near stream under nettle, mixed hardwood/conifer forest, dark granules on pileus surface (see macro photos), mostly washed away
host likely either Eucalyptus or avadado
Specimen 35
This mushroom was found on a mossy rock by a waterfall in a very moist microclimate
Found in gully on wet ground near stream under nettle, mixed hardwood/conifer forest, dark granules on pileus surface (see macro photos), mostly washed away