urbpan: (dandelion)
urbpan ([personal profile] urbpan) wrote2013-09-18 05:57 pm

3:00 snapshot #1394: Mushroom class


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Here's a participant in my Fungi Field Walk from last Sunday at Drumlin Farm. He's holding a dryad's saddle.

I was lucky that one of the other participants had seen the bloom of dryad's saddle, since mushrooms are so few and far between at the moment. The class was a big one by my standards, 16 total, and for the most part very engaged and interested. One was a teacher/naturalist from another wildlife sanctuary that might hire me to train their staff on fungi.

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This was the most interesting and attractive mushrooms we found, looking very much like an Amanita but firmly attached to a piece of bark from a dead tree. The problem with that is that all Amanitas are mycorhyzzal--they grow from the roots of living trees, they don't digest wood as many other types of mushroom-producing fungi do. I took it home and tried to get some spores with no success, which makes identification really difficult. I posted it to a couple of the mushroom ID forums on facebook and got a smattering of guesses. Macrolepiota or Lepiota seemed to be the neighborhood our mushroom came from. I know very little about this group, encountering them only rarely in the field. Time to bone up!


Oh, wait a minute, I think it's Leucoagaricus naucinus. Hmmmm...

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Here's the same mushroom, brought home and starting to bruise and wilt.

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