Image #4: I tried to do sporeprint on white paper, but there was no result. Might be white-spored.
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Feb. 9, 2015.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Dec. 11, 2014.
It has minute pores.
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Feb. 17, 2015.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Feb. 6, 2015.
Unidentified Neotropical Fungus 10
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Feb. 26, 2016.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Nov. 19, 2014.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Nov. 20, 2014.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Nov. 15, 2014.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Jan. 23, 2014.
Numerous spiders infected and dispersed. This one appears to have molted and died immediately after.
Saw this a few times always on the same downed fruit. I saw the same fruit with a healthy sprout that did not look like this. Thinking it's some sort of fungus?
decomposing stems of Equisetum fluviatile, alpine peat bog, leg. M. Krivúš, det. A. Polhorský
On unknown shallowly erumpant pyreno/sordariomycete. Nectrioid anamorph and teleomorph. On unknown decorticated Conifer log, Abies lasiocarpa or Picea engelmanii.. more likely the former. More study forthcoming. Flammocladiella, Thyronectria, Stylonectria
Strongly green in KOH.
Recomendaciones para su registro, descripción y posterior determinación:
-Fotografiar estructuras del basidioma/cuerpo fructifero/carpoforo/seta (por encima, por debajo y de perfil), en el caso de retirar el ejemplar sin conocerlo, debes comprometerte a realizar una descripción detallada para aportar a su conocimiento y que no quede en una muestra arrancada, fotografiada y desechada.
-Es importante que describas las dimensiones, forma, consistencia, textura, color y olor. Recuerda que los ejemplares cambian bastante según su estado de desarrollo, así que es ideal familiarizarse con la zona (sustrato) para hacer un seguimiento y logres detallar la variabilidad fenotípica del basidioma o ascoma (cuerpo fructífero)
-Toma fotos del entorno y agrega datos del ecosistema (humedad, temperatura, altura, tipo de bosque, etc).
-No olvides que la determinación de hongos es compleja y no se realiza únicamente con fotografías, esta tarea (a nivel de genero y especie; en la mayoría) implica otras actividades como descripción morfológica externa e interna, reacciones químicas, microscopia y ADN.
otras recomendaciones en:
Grupo XYLARIA Hongos de Colombia ©2015
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/groups/xylariahongosBogota/
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/neotropical_fungi/
teodorot@outlook.es 3102084355
Heavily isidiate lichen epiphytic on lawn tree in Northern Range rainforest
Entiendo que lo que uno ve es la reacción de la enredadera hospedera (específica) del hongo parásito, y no parte del hongo mismo
ATENÇÃO:
CONFIGURAÇÃO DE DIREITOS AUTORAIS DE FOTOGRAFIAS E OBSERVAÇÕES NO INATURALIST: No license (all rights reserved).
Os dados são de acesso aberto, e é recomendável que qualquer uso deles seja previamente autorizado pelo autor.
Growing on a palm nut, found in a cave about 200 meters from the entrance.
Metabolites fluorescent in 365 nanometer UV light.
check out a video of the partially submerged fruiting bodies at https://youtu.be/Owwc06erfRM
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Image #1:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x
0.8 sec, f/8.0, ISO 400
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (11 Images)
Image #2:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x
0.3 sec, f/8.0, ISO 400
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (21 Images)
Image #3: Samsung Galaxy Note 4
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Additional specimens not added to iNat observation fields:
Massey Herbarium: D. Newman MO366057
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Additional notes for sequences (bases on the right):
ITS:
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on May 10, 2019.
Image #1:
Canon EOS 6D + Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG Macro
1.0 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (8 Images)
Image #2:
Canon EOS 6D + Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG Macro
1.0 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (7 Images)
Image #3:
Canon EOS 6D + Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG Macro
1.6 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (3 Images)
Image #4:
Canon EOS 6D + Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG Macro
1.0 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (8 Images)
Image #5:
Canon EOS 6D + Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG Macro
1.0 sec, f/8.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (17 Images)
Image #6:
Canon EOS 6D + Sigma 50mm f/2.8 EX DG Macro
1/50 sec, f/16, ISO 6400
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
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—MO custom fields—
Comments: confirms my suspected ID at Observation 135451
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Apr. 21, 2019.
Spores 73-86μm x und 8.5-11.5μm. Extremely tomentose, multiple fruitbodies covered by a black, mycelial weft Pseudothecia up to 0.6mm wide.
7-11 celled, 8 cells most common, followed by 9 and 10 cells, 11 and 7 cells rare
Growing on dung of Branta canadensis
Mentioned by Richardson from Iceland; undescribed
New clade, potentially in Preussia rather than Sporormiella
Matches a soil sample from the Tibetan plateau with 3bp difference (4600m altitude) and two Estonian soil samples
For phylogenetic tree see last picture
Completely unidentified for eight years following this collection. Recollected in 2017 and observed to be growing from the buried feathers of the blue-throated piping guan (Pipile cumanensis). Presently believed to be a Neotropical cousin of Onygena corvina, but molecular and/or microscopic analysis are needed to say for certain. Probably undescribed.
Dried specimen obtainable with permission from el Herbario Nacional de Bolivia
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Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Nov. 11, 2010.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Apr. 3, 2019.
looks like a like a stipitate Stereum illudens...
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
Observation for cicada:
https://inaturalist.nz/observations/151368556
Habitat: Atlantic Paranaense forest
Substrate: on standing dead wood
Collector: D. Newman
Collection #: n/a
Collected during the 2015 “Curso de Identificación de Macrohongos Degradadores de Madera,” lead by Dr. Gerardo Robledo, Dr. Elisandro Ricardo Drechsler-Santos, Dr. Orlando Fabián Popoff Montañez and Nicolás Niveiro.
compare with Observation 276585
Substrate: on minimally decomposed sticks/twigs (1-2cm diam.) (same as APA073)
Habitat: montane to high-montane, humid, secondary mountain forests
Ecoregion: Bolivian Yungas (NT0105)
Collectors: D. Newman, P. Kaishian, L. Deininger, D. Ettlinger & T. Padilla
Collection #: CoHo012
firm, almost coriaceous consistency, possibly from drying/aging. note hyphal pegs! (same as CoHo012). compare with Observation 276889
Substrate: on corticate, fallen branch (~2-3 cm. in diam.) (same substrate as APA071)
Habitat: montane to high-montane, humid, secondary mountain forests
Ecoregion: Bolivian Yungas (NT0105)
Collectors: D. Newman, P. Kaishian, L. Deininger, D. Ettlinger & T. Padilla
Collection #: APA073
In mid-elevation premontane wet forest
Collected for the 2012 Organization for Tropical Studies “Fungi and Fungus-Like Organisms” Course, lead by Drs. Andy Miller, Priscila Chaverri, Greg Mueller, Carlos Rojas and Julietta Carranza
In mid-elevation premontane wet forest
Collected for the 2012 Organization for Tropical Studies “Fungi and Fungus-Like Organisms” Course, lead by Drs. Andy Miller, Priscila Chaverri, Greg Mueller, Carlos Rojas and Julietta Carranza
strong, white, basal, rhizomorphic cords of mycelium
Substrate: on cortex of partially decorticate wood
Habitat: montane to high-montane, humid, secondary mountain forests
Ecoregion: Bolivian Yungas (NT0105)
Collectors: D. Newman, P. Kaishian, L. Deininger, D. Ettlinger & T. Padilla
Collection #: APA081
white spored, possibly globose and unornamented
Substrate: in dark, moist soil beside trail
Habitat: montane to high-montane, humid, secondary mountain forests
Ecoregion: Bolivian Yungas (NT0105)
Collectors: D. Newman, P. Kaishian, L. Deininger, D. Ettlinger & T. Padilla
Collection #: APA002
Substrate: on downed, corticate sticks
Habitat: montane to high-montane, humid, secondary mountain forests
Ecoregion: Bolivian Yungas (NT0105)
Collectors: D. Newman, P. Kaishian, L. Deininger, D. Ettlinger & T. Padilla
Collection #: APA038
note hairy stipes
Substrate: on well-decomposed trunk
Habitat: dry semideciduous forest [Curupaú (Anadenanthera colubrina) / Motacú (Attalea phalerata) / Bamboo (Chusquea spp.) / Bibosi (Ficus sp.)]
Ecoregion: intersection of Chiquitano Dry Forests (NT0212) and Cerrado Savanna (NT0704)
Collectors: D. Newman, I. Cuba Pinto, E. Melgarejo Estrada, D. Camacho Ramirez & S. Montaño Poquiviqui.
Collection #: DSN12.250 (SS42)
grey in KOH, white cottony border bruising red.
Substrate: corticate wood
Habitat: dry semideciduous forest [Curupaú (Anadenanthera colubrina) / Motacú (Attalea phalerata) / Bamboo (Chusquea spp.)]
Ecoregion: intersection of Chiquitano Dry Forests (NT0212) and Cerrado Savanna (NT0704)
Collectors: D. Newman, I. Cuba Pinto, E. Melgarejo Estrada, D. Camacho Ramirez & S. Montaño Poquiviqui.
Collection #: DSN12.213 (SS5)
In high-elevation Quercus forest in the Talamanca mountains.
Collected for the 2012 Organization for Tropical Studies “Fungi and Fungus-Like Organisms” Course, lead by Drs. Andy Miller, Priscila Chaverri, Greg Mueller, Carlos Rojas and Julietta Carranza.
Substrate: on firm fallen branch
Habitat: riparian “Tucumano-Boliviano” alder forest (Alnus acuminatus)
Ecoregion: Bolivian Yungas (NT0105)
Collector(s): D. Newman, I. Cuba Pinto, E. Melgarejo Estrada, M.Á. Centellas Levy, L.L. Moya Ramallo, A.I. Echevería Rojas & S. Chavez
Collection #: DSN12.141
Pileus: up to 13mm in diam, varying degrees of centrally depressed, attached laterally, glabrous, surface ridged with the pore pattern, 6F5 to 5C4, lighter at center; texture rubbery-gelatinous; context white, unchanging in KOH.
Hymenium: poroid, ~4 per mm at margin to ~1 per mm at apex; honeycomb-like, radially elongated; white, some FBs with a distinct orange cast (5A3-5A4); tubes up to 3mm long; hyphal pegs visible in pore mouths.
Stipe: up to 17mm long, up to 5mm thick, tapering below; glabrous, roughly concolorous with hymenium, somewhat darker/dingier below.
Spore Deposit: not specifically recorded, presumed white/light
Odor/Taste: nondescript
Substrate: in grass beneath Salix sp. (?), some on twigs and herbaceous debris
Habitat: landscaped/cultivated area, ~3400m
Ecoregion: Central Andean Wet Puna (NT1003)
Collector(s): D. Newman
Collection #: DSN12.012
Upturned vase-like annular ring and the greenest gills you’ve ever seen. A shame this was brought to my attention post-plucking and already about half way to dessication.
Dried specimen obtainable with permission from el Herbario Nacional de Bolivia
Specimens collected, transported, deposited, duplicated, exported and DNA sequenced with the express, written permission of the Ministerio del Ambiente, Agua y Transición Ecológica (MAE) and the Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INaBio), in compliance with the Nagoya Protocol. Copies of permits available to select parties upon request.
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Image #1:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon EF50mm f/2.5 Compact Macro
1/40 sec, f/11, ISO 200
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (9 Images)
Image #2:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x
1/20 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (51 Images)
Image #3:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x
1/20 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (28 Images)
Image #4:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x
1/10 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (14 Images)
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Additional specimens not added to iNat observation fields:
Herbario Nacional del Ecuador: RLC1612
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—MO custom fields—
Comments: ?
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Feb. 8, 2022.