In soil, very easily removed shallow mycelium
Rotted stump nearby in mixed woods
White center. No particular scent
Last pic is of a mushroom growing in same area
Many
wish my pictures were better, was such a pretty specimen
In soil at base of camellia bush. Mature oaks very near.
Striated margin, tan cap with darker center, white flesh
Stem, hollow, light tan with white volva at base
White gills, short, close, appear attached
Collected
FY
Several various stages of development
Creek bank, moss and dirt
Collected for mycoblitz
Tan cap darker near margin (aging), margin rolled downward
Veil remnants under cap, seen along margin
Stem equal, dotted heavily, shaggy,
Older specimens have a ring with dots above it (now wondering if the same as newer specimen)
Angular pores, decurrent
Suggestions:
pic 1, Suillus placidus, Suillus cothurnatus, Suillus hirtellus
pic 2. Suillus acidus, Suillus clothurnatus, Suillus salmoncolor
overall inat suggestion: Suillus hirtellus *I don't think so, mine has a ring
Leaning towards
In soil, among grasses, few hardwood nearby
Moist area near lake
Huge clump, have never observed Suillus in a clump
Collected
Found among sedges near willow. Slimy cap and very dark purple colors.
Mixed woods in soil
Hardwoods
In soil
Many
these young specimen were nearby:
Mixed woods
Two
Red bruising on stem, slight on flesh
attempted to bruise more with thumb, but no reaction
Suggestions:
says Boarangia, but it didn't stain blue? Too old?
Pine forest
Single
straited cap margin, possibly tan veil remnants along margin, golden color
White, close gills, attached?
White flesh
shaggy white stem, soft stem center akin to marshmallow, equal, large bulb base
Pleasant scent
retained for Mycoblitz
Suggestions:
pic 1. Amanita crenulata, Amanita russuloides, Amanita panterinoides
pic 2. Amanita crenulata, Amanita roseotincta (no visible ring), Amanita russuloides
overall inat suggestion:
Amanita crenulata, Amanita russuloides, Amanita sect. Amidella
**A. crenulata? Striated margin, color match, most obs show more veil remnants
Location: Langdale Park
Habitat: on ground near wood and wet leaves
Cap is greenish brown color, has white gills, thick stipe with similar color to the gills.
Spore print: powdery white
Spores: warted and round (in last picture the spores are in iodine)
Found by Jacob Pulk. Very fluorescent in 365 nanometer ultraviolet light.
On oak, kind of soft, powdery. Seems to be parasitizing something.
Partially living hardwood tree, on the dead side
growing with Trametes
single
Yellow/tan cap with scattered rust colored scales
gills attached and close, some short, yellow, rusty colored spores (i think)
yellow/tan curved stipe, scales towards base, orange/brown/yellow flesh in stipe
*Retained for Mycoblitz
In pine grove
growing on pine needle duff
on the dry side
cap yellow/tan, smooth,cracked and browning especially at the margin
Stem more on the yellow side with visible white mycelium at the base
gills white, close, some short, not attached
white flesh
Suggestions:
pic 1. Collybiopsis peronata (RG obs have more mycelium and gills look different ), Rhodocollybia asema (No RG in GA), Inocybe sindonia (no RG in GA)
pic 2. Gymnopus dryophilus, Rhodocollybia asema (No RG in GA), Pseudosperma rimosum
pic 3. Rhodocollybia asema (No RG in GA), Rhodocollybia butyracea, Inocybe albodisca
Fall MycoBlitz
https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/summer-continental-mycoblitz-2024
Suggestions:
Pic 1. Inocybe sindonia (no research grade in GA), Collybiopsis peronata (no hairy foot), Agaricus diminituvus (no evidence of ring, gills white (no)
Pic 2. Pluteus aurantiorugosus (no research grade in GA), Cystodermella cinnabarina (gills different), Marasmius strictipes (fits some characteristics)
Growing in pine needles and rotted logs nearby
Remarkable fruit scent, many sporadically in the area
Best guess Marasmius strictipes based on cap size, color, gill characteristics,white mycelium, but this one had a very nice scent which is not characteristic of the mushroom. Also, these were growing with pine.
Gymnopilus?
North Georgia Forest, early October. Edible but didn't try it.
Suggestions:
hardwood area
spore deposit on cap, peachy/pink
maybe
Clitocybe subconnexa? Nah. Those seem to have decurrent gills.
Hardwoods nearby; growing in moss and grasses
Tiny specimen, many
Orange cap, red/orange center, cracked midway to margin, yellow undertones
Gills white, crossvein, distant, decurrent
(PG)
Base of living oak tree
Robust cap, pitted, clustered, wrinkled?
Gills - some look pinkish/purplish, some tan, short, close, some look forked
Stem -cream colored
Suggestions:
pic 1. Desarmillaria caespitosa (no), Collybiopsis luxurians (no), Armillaria mellea (no)
pic 2. Pluteus cervinus (no), Desarmillaria tabescens (no), Desarmillaria caespitosa (no)
pic 3. Homophron spadiceum, Psathyrella piluliformis (no), Hebeloma velutipes (not likely)
See spore print-Reddish brown
Hardwood tree
Mixed forest in leaf duff
Veil still intact!
Mild play dough smell, strong farinaceous taste. In moss under white oak, probably Quercus alba.
Very fluorescent in 365 nanometer ultraviolet light
Smells amazing, no bruising, growing near pines and hardwoods
Same area as A. Persicina
Near wet area, pine and bamboo
Cap -orange margin, red center, tan partial veil remnants, margin trimmed in lighter color
Flesh yellow and possibly stains yellow (see photo 8) dark yellow around flesh
Gills cream but darker around margin, kinda orange as if cap color shows through to gills, close, forked, short, attached
Stem white at apex then yellow, ring yellow with some areas browning, bulb base, white mycelium, also not hollow but not solid either
*cap has the same iridescence -
as A. persicina, maybe it is one!
(VG)
Mixed woods in a creek bed, with stilt grasses
Hairy Curtain Crust? Nope Ca. (VGJG)
Fruiting on well rotted/blackened Russula. Star like, flat hymenial surface(not gilled).
Did not harvest/preserve this collection.
Shiny cap & stipe. Staining yellow at the base of stem over time. Gills & spores pink; spore print on the stipe in last photo. Mixed woods with pine. Odor indistinct.
Orangey-yellow brownish wavy caps, margin inrolled, ruffled and yellow at the outer perimeter, forked with intervening blunt fertile folds extending down the stipe. Sweet, fruity scent of apricots. Growing up against sidewalk curbing in urban setting!
Found in early fall in Brookes County. The habitat it was found in was on the ground near trees. It smelt very mild and fishy and it did lactate white. The cap was a tan-orange color. where the surface was dry and the cap was convex or dome-shaped, meaning the cap turned upwards, exposing the gills. The gills were close and cream-colored and adnate, meaning the gills were attached broadly to the stipe. The stipe was the same color as the cap, a tan-orange color just more paler and it was thick and smooth. And the spore print was white and almost round.
Months later, he's still there.
Cap dry, felt-like, with inrolled margin. Gills decurrent, close, pinkish. Stipe thin, dry. Odor farinaceous.
Brown uplifted cap, white toward the margin, darker at the depressed center, gills crowded with forking. , staining slowly pale red where bruised then finally blackish more slowly, 15 minutes or more.
Small dark caps when young, becoming paler brown with cap fibers, distant white gills, white spore print, stipe often with channel down the middle. Growing in grassy area.
under leyland cypresses. strong acrid smoke odor when crushed, turned darker where crushed on stem
this is just what inat kept pulling up - mushroom was growing around and on the base of a leyland cypress