Found growing amongst Ponderosa Pine, Douglas and Grand Fir along a trail around 2800ft.
Purchased from a vendor in the Mercado de San Juan in Mexico City (stall #261). Dried and wrapped in plastic. Not
labeled.
Purchased from a vendor in the Mercado de San Juan (stand #261). Not labeled. Dried and wrapped in plastic.
HAY-F-002780
Micscroscopy:
spores = round, smooth, and most with 2 oil droplets per spore
asci = not amyloid tipped in melzers,
The closest sequence in Genbank is at 82% - except for one soil fungus sequence from North Carolina that's 99.18% similar. This is likely an undescribed species or a species that has been described a long time ago but has not been sequenced.
Near oak and other hardwoods in moss in a peninsula in Ohrbach Lake
I got quite a surprise when I looked at these odd "sporodochia" and they started to wriggle around on my slide after a few minutes!
picture 2-3 show individual immediately after mounting them in water still in their deshydrated form
Picture 8 show the corona (which was ciliate, albeit this trait did not show up on pictures)
Picture 9 show a corona and toe from another individual and picture 10 show the mastax.
Underside of decaying hardwood
White rot
5-6 ppmm
Odor not distinctive
Koh : black
Bruised dark red/brownish
Spores slightly allentoid 1.25-2.5 x 3.75-4.3
Skeletal hyphae thick walled, 4um thick
Clamps present
White rot on deciduous wood.
No Koh reaction
Spores IKI- 4.38-5.6 x 2.5 um
2-3 ppmm
Readily separable from substrate
No odor
large very pale gymn with a very pleasant smell, was associated with conifers