Rust on Madia gracilis in grassland. Amorphous orange cake-like accumulations on the underside of leaves.
Folsom Lake State Recreation Area- Mixed ecotypes. Quercus wislizeni dominant woodland with scattered Pinus sabiniana, occasional grassland zones and chaparral
Found in a rodent dig in sandy soils under Quercus wislizeni and Styrax redivivus
Truffle with scaly, orange-red peridium. Gleba white, veined, gelatinous looking, with orange, inverted tissue in center
Smell indistinct
Folsom Lake State Recreation Area- Mixed ecotypes. Quercus wislizeni dominant woodland with scattered Pinus sabiniana, occasional grassland zones and chaparral
Growing on well decomposed wood under the bark of a large, moist, decomposing log (probably Pinus sabiniana)
Irregular, parachute/umbrella like form with a white, sulcate, irregularly lobed pileus covered in cobweb-like hairs. Lamellae distant, veiny. Blotches of pink coloration throughout
Smell indistinct
The sequence matches the type collection for C. velatus.
In the original description the authors gave clearly incorrect spore measurements.
Not viscid but could it just be dry? Found a viscid curly one buried in rotted log a few feet away. Tan oak redwood Doug fir nearby
Near coast live oak and bay laurel fruiting underneath a wooden step in the trail, protruding from the ground. Mostly smooth peridium. Gleba composed of tightly folded "gills". Faint fruity rubber odor.
Found in my personal garden
Growing on dead, woody twigs of Malva assurgentiflora
Minute cups with a textured, greyish hymenophore, exterior covered in dense white hairs. Many of the sporocarps have internal growth giving them a donut-like appearance
Under ponderosa pine and white fir. Odor pungent, like cheese and old feet and mushroom. Peridium essentially disintegrated, exposing gleba.
Second and third photo show specimen that was found in situ. I brought the specimens home and put them in a small container with a damp paper towel and a week later they formed fruit bodies as shown the rest of the photos
Isolated from stem of Ceanothus ophiochilus.
“CO1”
Spores 11.6-14.1 x 2.8-3.2 microns. asci 8 spored, blue apices in iodine. paraphyses 2-3 microns wide, with vacuolar bodies.
On Madrone log.
Spores 15(17) X 3-3.5 µm.
Asci 102-111 µm long.
Next obs. same fungi on a nearby log - 1/4 mile away also on Madrone.
No uv
In coast live oak and bay laurel duff. Cap velvety when young, opening into somewhat broad appressed scales. Cap remaining mostly conical. Stipe texture same as cap. Densely matted cobwebby basal tomentum with rhizomorphs extending from the cobwebby material. Gills with pink hue even when young.
Pale, applanate cap,
Creamy gills,
Slender stipe with white fuzzy at base,
Indistinct taste,
Cardboard odor,
Growing next to parking lot,
Near redwood
A beautiful, lignicolous, primarily tropical and subtropical genus in the Cortinariaceae. An unnamed section (as of the 4th edition of Agaricales in Modern Taxonomy) contains the (then two) species with prominent lilac pigments, though more have been described since.
Substrate: on downed, well-decomposed, decorticate “Laurel” log (Ocotea sp.)
Habitat: secondary lowland tropical rainforest, regularly subject to landslides and some human disturbance. adjacent to golf course and horse pasture.
Ecoregion: Southwest Amazon Moist Forests (NT0166)
Collectors: D. Newman, P. Kaishian, D. Ettlinger & T. Padilla
Collection #: CHOC032
Seen sitting on the ground during a snow storm
Mixed hardwood/conifer forest in the Madeline Sone Wildlife Preserve
Growing on a ~2in diameter Umbellularia californica branch in a Sequoia sempervirens and Umbellularia californica dominant forest by creek
Reflexed body form with a dark brown/black cap and margin. Hymenophore dingy, off-white to grey with irregular, angular pores
Smells like an auto mechanic shop- hints of petrochemicals and slightly metallic
KOH indistinct
White popcorn-like blobs and orange slime on Paspalum urvillei.
Grass: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/164915845
Epicoccum andropogonis parasite (black brain-like sporodochia) https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/164916139
Fusarium: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/171515706
What a treat! Around a dozen of them feeding in the exposed rocky/grassy area -- and all around my friend and I :)
KOH reaction went from green to bright yellow within a few minutes. Rusty brown spores evident where gills attach to stipe (not shown as clearly in photograph). Was found growing in mixed tanoak/madrone/conifer forest.
Infrequent but not rare in mid-elevation (5-6.5 K feet) areas east and slightly northeast of Mt. Shasta.
San Vicente Redwoods- Mixed hardwood/conifer forest that burned in the 2020 CZU fire
Growing from a burned piece of wood under Quercus agrifolia, Arbutus menziesii and Pseudotsuga menziesii. Found on the side of the forest that burned at low intensity in the 2020 CZU due to cultural fire
Small cups with an olive green-brown hymenophore and a light brown exciple
Smell indistinct
A minimum of ~294 caps present in an area of ~ 3 m²
Growing in pine and fir forest. Pileus silvery, irregularly ruffled at the edges. Lamellae cinnamon brown, free. Stipe white, cylindrical with slightly bulbous base.
M000003
I think it’s Madrone. Land Trust of Santa Cruz County permit
This was a super cool find after work on my short xc ski trip!
I first noticed it when it either jumped down or fell from a tree. At first I thought it was a cat it was quite chonky. haha. I don't believe it saw me from the distance, though, as it appeared to be looking away (third pic). And when I retraced my tracks I stopped at where it had been approaching my tracks. At that point, I was about 20 feet away and it popped up and stared at me for 5-7 seconds. Super cute! Unfortunately I couldn't get my camera out in time again as I was struggling to get up a short and steep incline (and needed my ski poles).