Arrhenia seemingly growing from Peltigera lichen, potentially A. peltigerina
Found and collected by @Brennons
Growing on Marchantia polymorpha or Conocephalum. I didn't think Marchantia had black streaks like this, but gemma cups were present on this wall of liverworts like Marchantia.
Rickenella mellea S.l. or Loreleia postii perhaps. It appears to be growing out of the moss. Collected by @brennons
Slow, slight blue staining on stem and cap flesh. Quick blue staining on pores.
Am I seeing gills or falsies? Growing on stick -- lakeside. AI Suggestion of Guepiniopsis - not convinced,
Fruiting on small diameter hardwood log. Very small (1-2mm) spines on underside. Slowly bruising smoky grey around cap edge and on underside with handling.
"salmon Chanartelle" - salmon "gills" that are reticulated, white, stem, yellow cap top. Collected for DNA. I.D. Via Patrick Leacock
A secotioid fungus growing on wood. very strong odor of coconut.
These tiny spoon-like fungi were growing from a steep mossy trail bank very close to the pullout for parking and trailhead.
in spruce plantation, amyloid spores
MRD0018
Station : Forêt d'Enseignement et de Recherche du Lac Duparquet (FERLD)
Lieu: Rapide-Danseur
Habitat: Forêt mixte (sapin baumier et peuplier faux-tremble)
Substrat : Sur mousses
Collectionneur : Mathias Rocheleau-Duplain
Déterminateur : Mathias Rocheleau-Duplain et Jonathan Jensen-Lynch
Éléments microscopiques :
basides à 2 sterigmates
Spores : 5,8 - 6,3 x 4,5 - 4,9 µm
Height: 3mm
Diameter: 4mm
Substrate Moss
Habitat: Ferny forest
Other spp: Hedycarya angustifolia, Dicksonia antarctica, Microsorum pustulatum, Polystichum proliferum, Coprinellus sp., Scutellinia scutellata, mosses
A pseudo-pseudo flower. Mycena whose cap has opened up to look like a small flower.
Megacollybia rodmanii host. Vouchered JET230703_10
On a mossy hummock in rich cedar-hemlock-ash swamp.
WDV 586
With extremely vibrant glancing of the pores when rotated.
Collected for the 2018 Peck Foray held at the Sieg Conference Center near Lockhaven, Pennsylvania.
—
Image #1:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yuji High CRI LED PAR38 Lamp + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/125 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (17 Images)
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Image #2:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yuji High CRI LED PAR38 Lamp + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/125 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (17 Images)
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Image #3:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yuji High CRI LED PAR38 Lamp + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/125 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (17 Images)
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Image #4:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yuji High CRI LED PAR38 Lamp + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/125 sec, f/8.0, ISO 200
Focus Stacked with Zerene Stacker (17 Images)
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
Image #5:
200x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #6:
200x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #7:
400x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #8:
400x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #9:
400x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #10:
400x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #11:
1000x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #12:
1000x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #13:
1000x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
Image #14:
1000x – 10% KOH – Setae
Olympus BHS + Canon 6D + PA1-10A Photomicroadapter
—
—MO custom fields—
Comments: starting to see these things everywhere…
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Sep. 27, 2018.
Moss Associate
Very small <2cm
@corndog
bad micro pics at 60x
Image #1:
Canon EOS 6D + Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x + Yongnuo YN-14EX TTL LED Macro Ring Flash
1/180 sec, f/9.0, ISO 100
Color Corrected w/ X-Rite ColorChecker Passport
—
Additional notes for sequences (bases on the right):
ITS:
—
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Apr. 27, 2018.
Conifer Log. Average spore size is 42 x 15 microns. Smooth to slightly roughened with one large and two small oil drops when mature.
Paraphyses clavate, septate, filled with colored granules that are released when you make a squash mount.
The above photos are of immature specimens. Luckily, there was a remnant of an old fruit body further down the log.
Not a clear DNA ITS match.
I should have noted what tree the cone came from.
Unfortunately I deleted the field photos. Growing in a small crevice in a sandstone outcrop / overhang.
Coprinellus 'PNW 04' growing completely submerged in flowing water on various small pieces of wood. I have no reason to think the water level here has recently risen, in a spring and summer long stream of snowmelt directly below a culvert in a considerable current, we haven't had any significant hot streak that would have raised the flow.
Overmature and mature clusters collected. Bases of the stipe seemed to have a "holdfast" adaptation at the base similar Vibrissea, see pictures. (I know they are in a different order, more of a visual metaphor)
White spores, growing within 10 feet of Lyophyllum d, Marasmius o, and shaggymanes. Pothunters beware!
Common size for all the thuja in this area
spores and leptocystidia rather large
spores subglobose to ellipsoid, inamyloid, ornamentation not found in MLZ, thick-walled?
already reported from Japan (Maekawa, 2021)
Ulli Kullik's. Mixed woods. Vouchered. JET230814_01
Podospora millespora
https://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/SynSpecies.asp?RecordID=337415
Black perithecia growing on incubated dung of Sylvilagus floridanus
Perithecial necks totally glabrous
Asci saccate, basally tapered, and appearing to house 1024 spores based on estimation and literature. Seems possible these are only 512 spored asci but those species did not match macroscopically.
Immature spores blue en masse!
Mature spores nearly black in color
Apical caudle scraggly and crooked, basal caudle is the same.
Got to species using this key
The long sap streak on a large White Pine was heavily colonized with the small orange apothecia. Spores 2 μm diameter, globose, hyaline, somewhat thick wall.
In cedar swamp on moss-covered rotting stump
Near blueberry bushes
It is certainly a Cortinarius but I don't know the species. Area between stream and the gravel gated access road in a damp mossy area