Under pine
This is a picture of Omphalotus illudens at Seneca Creek State Park in Gaithersburg, Maryland.
Opaque ?
Hardwood area of mixed woods
Few
Chestnut color cap with white margin
White fluffy fertile surface, pores round and angular
Depressed at stalk, stem matches cap color
This is before I started cutting the specimen in half. My guess is Chestnut Bolete.
Few
On log,
Mostly hardwood area
May revisit remaining specimen for further study
Brown cap lightening towards the margin, darkest in center ,striated
Tan gills, fluffy mass around point of stem attachment (noticed in photos)
Bruised gills, darken slightly (left side)
White stem equal, darker at base
Pictures take. In a darker area
Will revisit in a few days to see how it matures
Orange cap with yellow center
Stem matches the yellow color on cap
Could not determine stem attachment at this time
Very small specimen
9/4 additional pictures. It dried out, but I can confirm gills.
Stem has flattened but is pretty strong. I can hold the stem base without the cap and stem bending which I didn’t expect.
Hardwood area of mixed woods
Zone caps in shades of tan and white
Fertile surface cream and white, smooth
Many..
Hardwood
Prominent hairs covering cap, zoned
Pores in the larger side
Two
Growing at the base of a steep creek bed, in soil and among roots in mostly hardwood area
Looks a little different than other C.cinnabarinus
Cap is salmon color not brilliant red
Maybe due to aging?
Gills come further down the stem and the color is lighter where they attach, cross veins, and forked, decurrent gills visible from
a side view
Stem is a much darker orange color
White mycelium seen at base (pic 1)
ultimately selected red chanterelle as the ID, because no other options are available
Gills bright yellow, close, some short and decurrent running way down the stem
Brown caps, with some yellowing, margin uneven
Stem yellow with brown not sure if the later is spore deposits
One cap clearly has brown spores deposited on it
Retained specimen if we need to see the flesh color
Mainly pine trees but these are growing next to a hardwood (see pics)
Phylloporus leucomycelinus?
Hickory branches on ground.
Hardwood twig
Many
Tannish white cap,lined from cap center where it’s darkest
Uneven margin
White,decurrent,forked, some short, cross veins (a lot going on)
Stem white, somewhat translucent,
Darker near base
look like very small gerronema strombodes, especially the caps
Hardwood growing on bank next to lake
Several
Immature and mature specimens
Great scent for a dried out mushroom
Like ceramic when I pulled from the tree; a little unusual
Decurrent, dried out gills, yellow and brown where driest
Yellow dried out cap, the immature cap is the same color with darker brown areas possible dried out too
Mixed woods
Dead stump
Fresh specimen, large approx 6-7 “ wide; clusters growth pattern
On the slender side , not sure of ID
White gills, decurrent
Stem has lines extending down to base, looks like extension of gills also shaggy
Mixed woods
Resinous dots on stem
Mix of round and angular pores, large
Fertile surface depressed at stem, yellow
Mixed woods
Smelled fishy :)
Broke to pieces upon handling
Mixed woods
Base of pine tree in various stages of development
Pine
***definitely a Russula
-AI says R. Crustosa yet confirmations of this species aren't generally given on iNat
-Moss, and mixed woods logs
-Dark velvet appearance with depressed, darker center, lighter color around cap margin and dark center
-attached, slightly decurrent olive colored gills
-stem, equal and same color as gills
*pictures aren't of the best quality here, but I posted due to the specimen's uniqueness to me :)
This ID is a total SWAG
Two for one
Mixed woods
Mostly pine
Mixed forest in leaf duff
Veil still intact!
The last of my Xeromphalina observations. Abundant at the park.