urbpan: (dandelion)
urbpan ([personal profile] urbpan) wrote2014-09-28 07:30 pm

Fungi field walk at Drumlin Farm

 photo IMG_7866_zpsf00daa43.jpg
I was frankly dreading today's Fungi Field Walk, because we're in the middle of a drought. I don't think it's rained in over 2 weeks. I expected to find maybe some polypores and perhaps some little forest mushrooms like this one--probably Dacryopinax spathularia.


 photo IMG_7868_zps8a1a0384.jpg
But we found kind of a lot of different species! This is a chunk of ash tree bolete, showing the distinctive spore-producing surface. I hope the people who came on the walk are reading this now, because I gave the wrong scientific name in the field. It's actually Boletinellus merulioides.

 photo IMG_7865_zpsb4ae2e9c.jpg
This stick thoroughly colonized with (probably) Mycena galericulata was lurking in the wet shade of a footbridge over a stream that had been reduced to mud.

 photo IMG_7870_zps876e829d.jpg
I wish I knew what these are! At the time I guessed they were waxy caps, and they might be Hygrocybe marginata, "fading scarlet waxy cap," or maybe Pholiota astragalina (?) I'll probably never know without having taken a spore print.
EDITED TO ADD: Dianna Smith, Editor of the North American Mycological Association's bimonthly newsletter, THE MYCOPHILE, suggests Pluteus aurantiorugosus for an identification, which fits better than either of mine.

 photo IMG_7869_zpsaba5cee8.jpg
Fortunately there are insects about to make me feel more confident about my identifications. Here's a nice giant leopard moth larva, Hypercompe scribonia.

 photo IMG_7872_zps64e6531a.jpg
Dry as it was, you can't fault the day for it's beauty.

Post a comment in response:

This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting