Dead male in town park
Found at the base of a tree in forestry
Single specimen so didn’t make a collection
Permit held on file and copy submitted with collection.
Collected in the presence of Sapphire McMullen Fisher
pretty sure its on Eucalyptus regnans but didn't check at the time
Permit kept on file
Growing on the pileus of decaying Russula sp. Russula found with gills facing upwards and Asterophora on the underside next to soil.
6 other Russula decaying close by with Asterophora growing on them as well.
Collected under permit
Spore print white,
Hot peppery latex.
Collection permit held on file.
Found under Nothofagus cunninghamii, and Eucalyptus pauciflora.
Found growing on Bossiaea Cinerea seed pods.
2nd observation 11 months apart.
Small mushrooms growing from rotting wood on ground near big mossy log. Caps light purple, roundish. Gills purple, close, intercalcate, reaching stem. Stem light purple, central, slightly tapering thinner at base, rhizoids. Collected, LMRFNQ10.
approximately 4 cm across, a rich bright yellow, white gills, growing on soil, stipe approx 3 cm high and 1 cm thick.
Spore print apricot coloured.
Cap dull orange/red width to 5 cm height to 6cm. plane to slight umbo. sticky with visible globes of fluid at all growth stages. Leaves stains the fingers and leaves them sticky after handling. substrate is soil under leaf litter near a heavily decayed fallen tree. all specimens found in a 10mtr radius of that tree. I cannot emphasize how sticky this is.
Buff-brown small gelatinous polypore with lateral attachment
Very flexible, floppy fungi.
small, sparsely distributed. orangey colour, darkening with age, and paler when young.
very thin, easily crinkled, with a dry, tissue- paper texture.
A small number of white "gills" on underside?
Very small white headed fungus, with black stems. Growing out of a queen green ant. Ant was dead when observed. Found at the top of a lucky bamboo branch.
The locals were calling this Tubaria rufofulva, but I don't think it is.
I have no idea what this might be.
fairly common and widespread on soft tree-ferns
perhaps Gymnopus sp?