Growing on a dead, wet palm leaf petiole. Sclerotia gtrowing on a white, rhizomorphic subiculum; white when young and becoming brown when mature.
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Additional notes for sequences (bases on the right):
ITS:
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Dec. 19, 2022.
Manukau Domain, Lynfield, Auckland.
Black leaf spots on Hakea salicifolia.
Parasitic on the lamellae of Cortinarius chrysolitus
Originally described and illustrated in Canadian Journal of Botany 55(13):1701-1711. 1977.
On the lands of the Ngarrindjeri nation...growing in sand...clever sod! But what the heck is it?
On a birch (Betula) log ascoma orange perithecia.
2-celled spores have longitude striate, measure in H2O
(10.1) 10.8 - 12.1 (12.3) × (5.3) 5.4 - 6.3 (6.4) µm
Q = (1.8) 1.9 - 2.1 (2.2) ; N = 21
Me = 11.6 × 5.9 µm ; Qe = 2
Asci IKI-.
White-rot fungus. On decaying hardwood log in subtropical vine forest. No detailed examination of the specimen was made, but it closely resembles a similar specimen discovered in the Maleny Community Precinct 3.5 years later. That specimen had features consistent with Elmerina: flexible cap, large thin-walled pores, hyphal pegs intruding into the pore space, and cream to pinkish-brown pore surface colouration (refer https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/208675504).
Black pyrenomycetes fungi on Robinia pseudoacacia cut tree.
Perithecia immersed, with round ostiole.
Spores measured
*(15.7) 16.8 - 20.7 (21.5) × (7.2) 7.4 - 8.3 (8.6) µm
Q = (2.1) 2.2 - 2.6 (3) ; N = 16
Me = 18.6 × 7.8 µm ; Qe = 2.4
Asci weren't observed.
Several “eggs” found at the base of a shrub outside DRNA office in Bosque de Maricao. I dissected a couple in the field, and to my surprise the context was uniform (greenish) and I saw no apparent developing stinkhorn outline like I would expect with Phallaceae. I took a couple home hoping they would “hatch” so I could photograph them. A couple days later I noticed fruit flies (Drosophila sp) attracted to the eggs which appeared to have exudate on the peridium surface despite not having hatched. I removed one and cut it open and the context was now uniform green liquid gleba with a smell of sweet decaying fruit.
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Dec. 10, 2018.
Single whitish fungus, consistency of a tough marshmallow. Pale brown spines around edges.
Uploaded on behalf of the collector, Kym Brennan
Small, fragile, 10cm tall. In leaf mould in heavy shade, lowland spring-fed monsoon forest, on drier part towards margin.
This is a normal gilled mushroom that has a very thin cap flesh, which splits radially (between the gills). Further drying lifts and twists the gill-segments into the flower shape in the image. The type specimen from Vanauatu had the same form on all fruitbodies, but the author was unsure whether this was an oddity, or the normal condition. The find of this Australian specimen shows that it is the norm, but it would be great to find young fruitbodies to understand exactly of the final form develops – at what point in development does it depart from a mushroom shape?
The species is Hausknechtia floriformis, a monotypic genus only described in 2020, with a single species described (by Anton Hausknecht) in 2003, previously only known from Vanuatu. I have been on the lookout for it, great to know it occurs in Australia too.
A link to the genus description: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11557-020-01606-3
A link to the original species description: https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwjwh767wJD0AhWQXisKHV56AnkQFnoECAgQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.zobodat.at%2Fpdf%2FOestZPilz_12_0031-0040.pdf&usg=AOvVaw2rG4jlSDVwwBUmwAkpRYGM
Impacting planted Eucalyptus biocostata. Confirmed by a plant pathology lab, SESL in Sydney.
Stilbella is just a guess. A synnematous anamorph which appears to be growing on the sap oozing from a wounded black cherry tree.
Green mass of conidia at the head. Whitish stipe. The conidiospores are sub-globose, nearly lemon shaped, 2.5-2.9 x 2.2-2.5µm.
Mixed hardwood/conifer forest on edge of Alpine lake, Cataract Trailhead, MMWD
White fuzz growing prolifically on Armillaria sinapina, restricted to lamellae
beautiful perithecial Hypocrealean fungus on very rotten wood
Host unclear, on very rotten unidentified wood
Colonie effuse, composed of hundred of salmon/pinkish perithecia loosely embedded in a whitish subiculum. Perithecial wall composed of large cells up to about 10u, textura angularis (?). Asci uniseriate, difficult to visualize, octospored, but ascospores quickly break into two part spore inside of the asci. Part spore are triangular, smooth, hyaline and measure (3.5)4-5(5.5) - 1.5-2(2.5) and have a short appendage.
The habit of the spores to break into part spore is relatively common in the Hypocreaceae, however Arachnocrea is quite distinct by have a white subiculum and triangular part spores. A. scabrida have wider and ornamented spores.
On Gymnanthes lucida
Night walking, waiting for insects to come to blacklights I set up in three different spots around Long Pine Key.
My blacklighting observations from LPK before sunrise:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?on=2024-04-28&order=asc&order_by=observed_on&place_id=any&project_id=blacklighting-florida&user_id=joemdo
Video showing the lights I use for a typical setup:
https://youtu.be/tavmTa7WoPk
Blacklighting project for Florida: https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/blacklighting-florida
More details in general about my 2024 City Nature Challenge:
https://www.inaturalist.org/journal/joemdo/93673-city-nature-challenge-2024
Was growing on the bark of an Acacia longifolia that was dead and fallen over. Identified by admins of an Ascomycetes face book page. Very small. Less than 2 mm in diameter
White, stalked fuzzy topped fungi growing on deer dung off trail,
Near sitka spruce/hemlock,
No UV
Found by @samzanita at the base of a blade of grass on the underside of a log. Same specimen as this observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/199743127
The specimen was collected by Nate Dube and will be examined by them under higher magnification.
It was actively raining that day hence the shiny wet surface of the specimen.
Baited with sesame seed from soil collected in Capay valley more than 10 years ago. Resting sporangia are shown in the 2nd and 3rd images, and a zoosporangium is shown in the 4th.
Black fungus growing on topmost stalk of dead weed stem (2 dead flies stuck to it)
stephanocyst