Unknown location found by a foray participant. Later more Dermocybe found on Multi use trail
Hardwoods. On the trailside. Hard. White flesh. Magenta KoH reaction on edges of the cup shaped portions on the bisection
2 in this location
Cups on hardwood likely. Slightly translucent. In gregarious patches. Highly UV reactive with 365nm light. 0.5-1mm wide cups on average.
Quite large for what I'm used to seeing. Growing at the base of a Willow tree
Growing into the bark of a yellow birch. Sterile conch also present on the tree. Poor crest extending about 6 to 8 ft up the tree under the bark. Lightly fluorescent with 365 nanometer
Rhododendron, spruce, birch area between Cabin 13 and Cabin 15
Mixed woods.
Odor of cedar and radish. Taste of radish. Under Calocedrus decurrens with some Abies around. All parts extremely fluorescent yellow.
Micrograph 1 is tissue from the volva at the base of the stem, 400x. Micrograph 2 is spores from the cortina, 1000x.
Spores measure (6.6) 6.7 - 7.3 (7.4) × (5) 5.1 - 5.6 (5.7) µm
Q = (1.2) 1.3 - 1.39 (1.4) ; N = 15
Me = 7 × 5.4 µm ; Qe = 1.3
Mildly bitter cucumber scent, long, slender stipe with "hairy foot", terrestrial in Beech dominant woodlands
First photo with Pseudopithyella minuscula.
Cap and stem dry. Odor and taste of bleach. Extremely fluorescent in 365 nm ultraviolet light.
Spore print white.
Strong scent somewhere between the odor of a truffle and a Suillus pungens. Difficult to dry as it seems to have a very high oil content. Found growing near a rotten log and a series of tree roots. The only tree around was Nothofagus pumilo (Lenga tree).
Spores - elongated 10-12um in length with 1-3 oil droplets inside
One observation of this species on Mushroom observer http://mushroomobserver.org/observer/show_observation/231190
2-3 pronged pleurocystidia