13 total specimens found growing amongst Ponderosa Pine, Grand and Douglas Fir in a cluster within 10 feet of the site a visually similar specimen was found in 2022 that was sent off for DNA sequencing.
Original specimen’s iNaturalist link here - https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/119170214
HAY-F-006498
Habitat = small shrumps (4) occurring just above a large debris pile from some young trees that have all fallen in one area. One truffle had mold growing on it and grubs eating it. The other three were solid, no mold.
Scent when fresh = grape soda on a pan fried steak sitting on a rubber mat in the sun.
No UVF observed
Microscopy (2023.10.01)
Spores - round, rough with thick wall, ~up to 32.5 um in diameter, brown
Asci - 8 spores, 250 x 33 um,
paraphyse - swollen tips. 110 x 12 um
tissue was tough. Attempted water mounting, but everything was bound so tight I couldn't see individual structures. KOH mounting and then squishing allowed me to separate asci and paraphyses
p3 12-8
A very dense Hydnotrya, with a powerful aroma that is generally pleasant but difficult to pinpoint. Combination of sweet and savory, notes of soy sauce. Under pine and fir, soil very dry.
Young specimen. Fruiting hypogeously beneath Western red cedar and Douglas fir. Most likely a young tuckahoe- all white and leathery before hardening and turning crusty brown… Herbarium specimen available in Olympia, WA.
Gleba thick, leathery. All white, with small rhizomatous filaments surrounding.
Interior-potato like, hard. Odor: pleasant, sweet, faintly fungaloid.
Temp: mid 50’s.
Elevation: Sea level.
UPDATE on 7/11/24:
Mounted dry/powdery glebal tissue/spores on a glass slide in 3% KOH.
Spores: ROUND!!!! Thick walled and roughened on exterior. Making it impossible for this collection to be Wolfiporia(Wolfiporia have distinctly cylindrical spores).
Updated my identification for this collection to Mycenastrum corium based on round roughened spores, thick leathery Peridium(flaky textured) and brown spores at maturity(not white).
Found growing amongst Ponderosa Pine, Douglas and Grand Fir
Purchased from a vendor in the Mercado de San Juan in Mexico City (stall #261). Dried and wrapped in plastic. Not
labeled.
Purchased from a vendor in the Mercado de San Juan (stand #261). Not labeled. Dried and wrapped in plastic.
Originally posted to Mushroom Observer on May 27, 2019.
Golden-backed Frog
Mushroom grown on frog body
HAY-F-002780
Micscroscopy:
spores = round, smooth, and most with 2 oil droplets per spore
asci = not amyloid tipped in melzers,
Sphagnum associated
The closest sequence in Genbank is at 82% - except for one soil fungus sequence from North Carolina that's 99.18% similar. This is likely an undescribed species or a species that has been described a long time ago but has not been sequenced.
Near oak and other hardwoods in moss in a peninsula in Ohrbach Lake
I got quite a surprise when I looked at these odd "sporodochia" and they started to wriggle around on my slide after a few minutes!
picture 2-3 show individual immediately after mounting them in water still in their deshydrated form
Picture 8 show the corona (which was ciliate, albeit this trait did not show up on pictures)
Picture 9 show a corona and toe from another individual and picture 10 show the mastax.
Underside of decaying hardwood
White rot
5-6 ppmm
Odor not distinctive
Koh : black
Bruised dark red/brownish
Spores slightly allentoid 1.25-2.5 x 3.75-4.3
Skeletal hyphae thick walled, 4um thick
Clamps present
White rot on deciduous wood.
No Koh reaction
Spores IKI- 4.38-5.6 x 2.5 um
2-3 ppmm
Readily separable from substrate
No odor
large very pale gymn with a very pleasant smell, was associated with conifers
Exuberant fruiting from a large downed log.