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Patches

JohnE.Ringo Oyster Mushroom
Oyster Mushroom commented on by JohnE.Ringo Kentucky, USA11 years ago

Is the tree a cottonwood? Looks like Pleurotus populinus

JohnE.Ringo Unknown spotting
Unknown spotting commented on by JohnE.Ringo Braga, Portugal11 years ago

Oak pine woods - gotta be a Cortinarius sp.

JohnE.Ringo Clitocybe mushroom
Clitocybe mushroom commented on by JohnE.Ringo Braga, Portugal11 years ago

Is it Pholiota veris/ Kuehneromyces veris?

JohnE.Ringo Unknown spotting
Unknown spotting commented on by JohnE.Ringo Braga, Portugal11 years ago

Is it a Coltricia sp.? Regardless i think its in in Hymenochaetales, which i dont know well at all.

JohnE.Ringo Unknown spotting
Unknown spotting commented on by JohnE.Ringo Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia11 years ago

Looks like Chlorophyllum rhachodes. Check for reddish staining when broken and a "double edged" annulus.

JohnE.Ringo Unknown spotting
Unknown spotting commented on by JohnE.Ringo Towson, Maryland, USA11 years ago

Its an Oyster mushroom. Pleurotus sp. maybe P. pulmonarius. Try to figure out what type of wood its growing from.

JohnE.Ringo Witches' Butter Fungus
Witches' Butter Fungus commented on by JohnE.Ringo California, USA11 years ago

So Tremella feed from Peniophora fungi, not the wood itself?

JohnE.Ringo Unknown spotting
Unknown spotting commented on by JohnE.Ringo High Peak, England, United Kingdom11 years ago

It does kinda look like something on the cap, not a color change of the flesh. Inocybes are tough.

JohnE.Ringo Fungi
Fungi commented on by JohnE.Ringo Panama11 years ago

Im not sure what it is, but i think its the same as this spotting. http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/170...

JohnE.Ringo Unknown spotting
Unknown spotting commented on by JohnE.Ringo High Peak, England, United Kingdom11 years ago

Inocybe, whats up with the green marks on the cap? Could it be one of the green/blue staining species? They typically stain on the stem base though

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