Underside of well-rotted hardwood log in an Atlantic white cedar swamp with hemlock, pine, and birch
Darkening on bruising as well as KOH and ammonia
Mixed calcareous woods, growing in soil, lots of pine and oaks.
Other side of the park.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/57340343
Fungee V
Odontia ferruginea
Low quality seuqence, but pretty close to this: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nucleotide/MZ054362.1?report=genbank&log$=nucltop&blast_rank=1&RID=JS2CKX2D01R
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/92458900
Fungee obs
Tomentella "sp-IN04"
New to GenBank and my database.
Collected under Tsuga heterophylla
Cap: umbilicate, squarrosein middle across edges of belly button. Brownish grey to caramel. 2.1-3.5 cm across.
Stipe: equal, white, eccentric, bruising light orange. 4.0 - 7.5 cm long x 0.5 - 0.8 cm wide
Teeth: not present on stipe, light orange, up to 0.8 cm long, 0.5 cm wide, equal
Smell: mild to none
Taste: mild
Solitary
Unpleasant odor. As you can see from the leaf litter, both oak and pine are present.
Probably T. terrestris, but rather small.
At long last, I have been reunited with this species!
Smells like chanterelle perfume. Strongly. Growing under spruce in mostly conifer woods. Also with lots of tubies, which I included in one photo for comparison.
Caps 1-2.5cm, small, odorless, without pores. a guess as epithet = maybe T. caryophyllea? - I believe these are Thelephora. Growth in forest with mostly Pinus.
Directly under hemlock.
Beech, oak
Growing through thick leaf duff and on well decaying hardwood
I found these today in Macon County, NC at approximately 3000’ altitude. Growing out in the open under conifers, but no underbrush. They’re beautiful and fresh. They smell very smoky/sweet, quite delicious smelling. I haven’t seen these before. I brought some home but left several clumps untouched.
It is trying so hard to be a proper mushroom
Growing up and around everything in the area. Brown spikey spores point toward Thelephora.
Growing under Carya illinoinensis
Growing from soil in predominantly hardwood forest. Fruiting bodies light orange. Stipe is solid and with a shaggy texture.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on Jun. 30, 2019.
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/92427126
Fungee obs
Cantharellales "sp-IN01"
DNA ITS
Only matching seq is an environmental soil sample from IL.
Raw taste spicy when held on the tongue, but not lingering. Past experience tells me that they do not taste spicy when cooked. Nearby trees include sweetgum, oak, pine, chokecherry.
Growing in mossy yard adjacent to mixed wood forest. Raw taste test spicy on the tongue. No discernable odor. Will update with trees and micro.
On the stems of Cantharellus.
This was found growing near oak trees and other similar orange mushrooms that are commonly seen in thr area, yet these are white in color. I thought maybe they were old and faded but the immature mushrooms near it in this picture are white also. I wonder if it is a separate species?
01132302
Young Zelleromyces sp. growing in soil near pine trees. Reddish orange, with a paler orange (loculate) interior. Exuded white latex when cut.
Originally posted to MycoMap.com on August 28, 2017 by MycoMap.com user: Stephen Russell at https://mycomap.com/7057.
No distinct odor, cap dry, not viscid when wet. Growing from the ground under red oak, hickory, and tulip poplar. Observed in same spot each December.
Should have done spore print, maybe Entolomataceae? Fruiting singly trail side in mixed forest.
In bare soil in a small alcove/crevice in a steep slope. Pine, kalmia, sweetgum, sourwood, maple, galax.
Found poking out of a hole at the base of a large red oak tree.
Hardwood log