Growing in residential yard with grass. Pecan tree and Eastern Red Cedars in vicinity. No reaction on cap or stipe with KOH. No partial veil in young specimens. Base of stipe bulbous. Stipe shaggy. No discernable odor.
From a description of Zelleromyces in the southeastern United States in Mycotaxon 72, Steven Miller and Teresa Lebel describe Z. cinnabarinus as the most often found species in the genus. However, Z. cinnabarinus spores are about 13–17.5 × 11.5–15.5 μm, whereas this specimen's spores are 8–9.5 × 6.7–8.5 μm; almost a 2x discrepancy. This is mostly similar to another species described by Miller and Lebel, Z. versicaulis, with spores described as 8–9 × 6.5–8 μm. While Z. cinnabarinus grows exclusively under Pinus, Z. versicaulis may grow under Quercus, especially Q. virginiana. This specimen was growing a few feet away from the base of Q. virginiana.
Spores are hyaline in KOH, with ridges/ornamentation amyloid in Melzer's.
Images
All scale bars 10 μm.
1: Cross section showing latex
2: Spores – Melzer's
3-8: Habit
9: Basidium – MLZ
10: Peridium – MLZ
11-17: Basidia/hymenial elements – KOH
18-20: Hyphae – KOH
bit sticky, deep red, oozy (even though yes wet) also formed crust structure over a lot of this dead & down tree
12042217
Pale brown/tan cap, darker in the center. Cap is bell shaped then flat. Close tan gills, some straight and some wavy. Short gills frequent. Stipe is sturdy and thin; fuzzy, especially near base; reddish brown, sometimes getting paler towards the apex. Growing from dirt around leaf litter and dead wood.
Not 100% on this ID. Growing from leaf litter/broken down wood. Mixed woods.
Unknown agarics growing underneath a fallen log, very moist environment. Growing in a cluster.
Possible mycena sp. Very tiny but very tall. Growing from dead hardwood log.