Possible hyperparasite of Ophiocordyceps camponoti-floridani infected carpenter ant. Multiple found in close proximity, with seemingly uninfected O. camponoti-floridani nearby as well.
White fungus parasitizing insect pupae,
Found trailside,
Around 20 fruitbodies; largest cordyceps fruiting I've ever seen
Image #2 - Dried collection
Image #3 - UV of dried material
Parasite on https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/214222205 sequenced as Entoloma using PacBio
spores were 6-sided 8-10 x 6-8.5 microns. mixed conifers, mainly alpine fir in area. Dry open woods
from compact wet soil in seep
Growing from well decayed conifer debris in a boggy area. Specimen saved for Terri.
Fluorescing uneven patches of yellow and green in 365 nm UV light.
On slope of drainage. Gymnopoid looking stipe.
I don't think it's Mycena pura, didn't smell like it
Observation for plant host http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/174894339
Rhododendron menziesii and Vaccinum membranaceum are the potential IDs in my mind, both having similar shape, size and feel to the thin leaves.
No inflorescences to reference but glandular stems, leaves and leaf edges make me think Rhododendron.
Growing on pine duff in forest. Pileus grey, striate, lighter and ruffled irregularly at the margins. Lamellae light grey, free. Stipe whitish grey with a yellowish base.
Small, tan fungi,
Growing out of moss in the dunes,
No odor,
White UV on gills
Growing on blackberries that were still attached to the plant. Growing facing downwards
Some suggestions in this Facebook post:
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/XwAhpcR1ZGFRsqDh/?mibextid=xfxF2i
I'm leaning towards Chrysomphalina chrysophylla.
Edit:
White spore prints in last 2 photos ... point to Hygrocybe not Chrysomphalina.
Something like this one maybe?:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/218688744
PSME, light blue uv on hymenium
60mm wide cap. Convoluted and conical/bell shaped. Rusty sand colored felty veil tissue, easily rubbed off revealing striations. NO shaggy caps. Scabrous hollow stipe, darkening/yellowing at the base. Abruptly bulbous base with nodules and rhizomorphs. Gills white then mauve then brown/black. Black spores. Growing in large clumps on dead wood. Tastes somewhat vegetal. Deliquescing smelled quite foul.
Growing along roadcut in redwood forest. Pileus brown, minutely granular-scaly. Lamellae thick, widely spaced; yellow to white, widely attached to decurrent. Stipe bright yellow, brittle, dry, ornamented with white granular chevrons at the apex and bright white farina at base.
Growing in Sphagnum moss adjacent to bog
ID is best guess. Fruiting from a moist, moss-covered stream embankment under tanoak on a dry day (no rain for over a week). 20 or so fruitbodies scattered singly across 5' x 8' area. They presented as small dark gray pins, but turned out to be brown under magnification. About 10-15mm tall with heads/caps 1-2mm. Wiry and flexible, bouncing back quickly after bending and releasing.
Laccaria, pseudolaccaria, omphalotaceae?
In Cudoniella2 close to C. clavus? 3-4mm. semi-aquatic, in mountain stream.
last two photos taken after they had dried out a little.
On decaying alder I think. Mixed forest, sea level. Viscid cap.
Hairy stem base. On decayed wood.
Melanized peritheciate fungus on oak branches in Quercus chrysolepis and Q. wislizeni forest. Fruits consisting of small globular aggregates of perithecia, black, brittle, cinderlike.
Wonder if this is Coccomyces on Holly
Fruiting in moss covered/rotted wood beneath Douglas fir, snowbrush and Ponderosa pine.
Very small specimens.
Cap: granulose, powdery, veil material hanging from margins.
Gills: reddish/pink. Free.
Stem: pruinose, pinkish maroon, veil band visible.
Bulb attached to substrate.
Harvested 4 specimens.
Performed crush mount in KOH to view spores.
Spores: elliptical, slightly curved.
Dehydrated all specimens and bagged for herbarium collection.
My coinciding Mushroomobserver observation below-
Reminds me of Sclerotinia, found in a decaying polytrichum juniperinum mat.
Found near roots that were growing from a nurse log, which was likely spruce.
It appears to have hooked parathesis, septate spores, and the asci are amyloid in melzers reagent.
Not sure what this is, collected and attempts at cultures are underway. So far fungi of temperate Europe vol. 2 is turning up nothing.
Growing roadside, in dark mulchy soil, on a hillside. Yellow tones in spines.
Red KOH rxn. On grey pine duff
Growing in the forest duff around mostly cedar trees ... in a mostly conifer forest ... except for one fallen red alder ... and a maple in the distance.
Stinks like Tricholoma sulphureum/Coal gas/tar/Sulphur.
Same area (5 meters away) as original find:
https://www.inaturalist.ca/observations/187962914
"Cystolepiota 'bucknallii PNW03' - This beautiful, purple, cottony mushroom smells strongly and disagreeably like coal tar. This is a group of species in Europe and we have something distinct from all of them that likely needs a new name. These species clade far away from any other species and probably belong in their own section. A multi-gene study will have to confirm that don't deserve their own genus."
https://www.alpental.com/psms/ddd/Lepiotaceae/index.htm?fbclid=IwAR0jHIO5eyITJuPhJBl7LFNqH--3ANdikcBYh2NC77-4buB14bz8bsJtbQE
Abundant in 11-year old burn
In deep shade under a thicket of landscaped trees (maybe Fagus sylvatica) and blackberries behind the Talent City Hall.
F000156
On dead decapitated lepidoptera larva, I think.
Specimen was collected on April 1st and incubated in a moist container for 2 weeks, producing purple fruit bodies covered in conidia.
See observation
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/205155116 for original collection.
Growing on mixed conifer leaf litter in riparian forest. Pileus light tan, ornamented in cinamon-brown dusty looking scales, colored like a snickerdoodle; often dimpled in the center and irregularly wavy at margins in typical omphalinoid fashion. Gills wavy, some shallowly crossveined, deeply decurrent. Stipe whitish at apex, fading to pinkish brown at the base.
Could also be a Sclerotinia sp.?
Feeding on sediment bottom. 15 ft deep.
Aeolid, 1.5cm long. Pink-peach body. Rhinophores smooth, long and joined at base. Cerata abundant with white tips and dark pink to red digestive glands with uneven, bumpy form.
Same observation as jonathan1232, same location, same date.
Growing in mixed conifer forest under a yew tree. Pileus matte, powdery lipstick-brick red, with raggedy white veil tissue at margin. Lamellae reddish pink, free. Stripe fibrous, reddish with white scales, bruising dark red easily. K+ black, smell indistinct
Soft and were smells funky sweet an white fir
Tons of it in a small area growing on dead Red alder (Alnus rubra) twigs
pupa-like structure found on a well-rotted log
Perithecia just starting to become pronounced. On ants. Found by @fish_narc. Vouchered. @corndog @richtehan
Okenia rosacea with eggs was located underneath a pebble on reef at a depth of 20 feet. Lengths were 1 cm. Water temperature was 64 degrees F.
A collection of fruitbodies of an ascomycete bryoparasite-- they were growing much more sporadically than this image suggests. Younger fruit bodies were translucent and sheltered into the moss until fully erumpent with mature fruit bodies buff/brown
Necrotrophically parasitic on Racomitrium, the discolored area was an oblong circular area approximately one square yard in diameter, I thought I took a locality photo but I can't find it.
Growing under a log in Hesperocyparis sargentii forest. Small mushroom, squashed from growing in tight quarters. Cap grey and purple, pruinose. Lamellae an interesting key lime pie green. Stipe reddish purple, twisted and bent.
Growing out of moss
This was first seen by @smellyturkey who's observation you can see here: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/200154535
I think I saw this species last year:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/154667088
Habitat: Moss (Most likely Brachythecium or some similar pleurocarp) growing in a shaded wall of concrete.
Most fruiting bodies are less than a cm and have basal mycelium on the moss.
The first microscopy photo is in Melzer's reagent and the second in KOH.
Currently spores seem to grow and germinate in culture.
1 small fruit body was sequenced, but does not match the previous sequence obtained for this species. I'm inclined to think that the original sequence was contaminated as it was taken from a not so clean culture. I will update this with additional culture and fruitbody sequences. That being said, I will not upload this to genbank until I know for certain that the sequence read is good.
On another note hopefully I can find this again or can get multiple collections of this. I'll have to check the spot from last year.
If new sequences keep coming back as novel and I can't find anything in the literature I will take a crack at describing this as a new species (So long as I can get more than just ITS)
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/178330978 and https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/178330951 observed the same day, same locality
Montane Entalomatoid growing in moist soil along trail edge, no overstory plants in the area.
Similar to a @corndog observation in a similar, nearby locality and comparable elevation: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/183896554
and another collection of mine in Snoqualmie pass:
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/184817852
Sample sent to @relg (Ariel Goldsztejn) 12/4/2023
Caps 1 cm diameter, 1.5 cm tall. Growing from the soil walls of subalpine meadow trail cuts with short but steep 20cm soil edges, ~5.750 ft elevation, presumably same species as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/171323950 made nearby on the same day
Acomycete growing from decaying graminoid material in an area with Carex utriculata and Scirpus microcarpus. Growing gregariously over several square yards in a seasonally flooded area of a montane acidic fen peatland. @corndog has a Genus/Species concept for this and will likely be making another observation for these from this locality, I will link these observations when available
fruitbody diameter ~3mm, in a seep area around 3000' under noble fir, a pine species and a range of understory plants, environment pictured
growing from soil under mixed Abies species, Pacific silver fir, Douglas fir and Hemlock