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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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i think we should compile a list of all the known active species we can muster and find the best pictures (from this site) of those fungi and put a complete collection together.
it can be something that is always updated with new information and photos... it's silly not to really. what does everyone think...? we can use this thread to start sharing information and pictures. peace and love bloodworm Edited by bloodworm (09/19/11 09:01 PM)
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Bobdylanfan3 Stranger Registered: 07/06/11 Posts: 36 Last seen: 8 years, 6 months |
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Great Idea!
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maynardjameskeenan The white stipes Registered: 11/11/10 Posts: 16,391 Loc: 'Merica |
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Quote: I Think that's a great idea, also we should update the information on temperatures and dates of when mushrooms appear, the books are a little out of date. It would also help with cultivation of active species if people know what the temperature and humidity is when the mushrooms appear in the wild. Morphology is important too, we should show what the venerations in any specific species can be. We should also post pictures of what said mushrooms spore print looks like. great idea bloodworm Edited by maynardjameskeenan (09/19/11 08:54 PM)
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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Quote: agreed! -let's start by getting a good list compiled. -i suppose we could start by taking every states/countries active list and putting them together...i will do this. -feel free to chime in if you notice something not on the list, but i think that would be a good starting point. peace and love bloodworm
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maynardjameskeenan The white stipes Registered: 11/11/10 Posts: 16,391 Loc: 'Merica |
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Let me know if you need help with anything, I would love nothing better then contribute to the wealth human knowledge.
-------------------- May you be well. May you be peaceful and at ease. May you be happy. Edited by maynardjameskeenan (09/19/11 09:03 PM)
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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right now, i am just going to compile the list.
if you want to take care of places outside of the u.s., that would be cool. just use the shroomery active species list to start and we can add to that... shouldn't be too much trouble. peace and love bloodworm
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maynardjameskeenan The white stipes Registered: 11/11/10 Posts: 16,391 Loc: 'Merica |
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CONOCYBE:
Conocybe kuehneriana Conocybe siligineoides INOCYBE: Inocybe corydalina Inocybe aeruginascens Inocybe corydalina var. erinaceomorpha Inocybe corydalina var. corydalina Inocybe haemacta Inocybe tricolor Inocybe coelestium PLUTEUS: Pluteus cyanopus Pluteus glaucus Pluteus nigroviridis Pluteus villosus Pluteus glaucus PANAEOLUS/COPELANDIA: Panaeolus fimicola Panaeolus campanulatus Panaeolus bispora Panaeolus venezolanus Panaeolus tropicalis(pan cyan)? Panaeolus africanus Panaeolus microsporus Panaeolus retirugis Panaeolus cambodginiensis Panaeolus venezolanus Panaeolus rubricaulis Panaeolus moellerianus Panaeolus olivaceus Copelandia tirunelveliensis Copelandia tropica Copelandia anomala Copelandia bispora GYMNOPILUS: Gymnopilus subpurpuratus Gymnopilus lateritius PSILOCYBE: Psilocybe antioquiensis Psilocybe angustipleurocystidiata Psilocybe acutipilea Psilocybe alutacea Psilocybe arcana Psilocybe argentipes Psilocybe armandii Psilocybe australiana Psilocybe aztecorum var. aztecorum Psilocybe aztecorum var. bonetii Psilocybe paulensis Psilocybe paupera Psilocybe pericystis Psilocybe plutonia Psilocybe ramulosa Psilocybe rickii Psilocybe subbrunneocystidiata Psilocybe subyungensis Psilocybe uruguayensis Psilocybe cabiensis Psilocybe columbiana Psilocybe guatapensis Psilocybe heliconiae Psilocybe pintonii Psilocybe plutonia Psilocybe semiangustipleurocystidiata Psilocybe subacutipilea Psilocybe subhoogshagenii Psilocybe yungensis Psilocybe caerulescens var. caerulescens Psilocybe dumontii Psilocybe yungensis Psilocybe caeruleoannulata Psilocybe uruguayensis Psilocybe meridensis Psilocybe plutonia Psilocybe pseudobullacea Psilocybe subyungensis Psilocybe caerulescens Let me know if it got some in there more than once. As far as I know none of these grow in the US. -------------------- May you be well. May you be peaceful and at ease. May you be happy. Edited by maynardjameskeenan (09/19/11 11:07 PM)
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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nice.
Psilocybe mammillata has been reported in FL. i'm currently looking for it. Psilocybe cubensis Psilocybe caerulescens there are a bunch on there that grow in the u.s. it's cool though. i found the shroomery link to plenty of active species all over the world. Psychoactive Mushroom Species Genus Conocybe Conocybe is a fairly large genus with over 50 species in North America alone. At least one species in this genus, Conocybe filaris (= Pholiotina filaris), is deadly poisonous. Conocybes are often called dunce caps or cone heads because they usually have a conical or bell-shaped cap. They are mostly fragile, often ephemeral, Mycena-like mushrooms with a long, thin and fragile stem and rusty-brown to ochre-brown spores. Conocybes are largely differentiated on microscopic characters. They are sometimes confused with genus Psilocybe mushrooms, but have brighter brown spores. Among the brown-spored mushrooms, they are easily to be confused with Bolbitius, which usually have a distinctly viscid, striate cap, and Galerina, which have a filamentous rather than cellular cap cuticle (it looks like weaved fibers under the microscope whereas those of Conocybe are composed of inflated round cells resembling cobblestones) and an often viscid and/or translucent-striate cap. These mushrooms are partial to warm weather and fruit in great abundance on watered lawns. Some, such as Conocybe lactea, are so frail that they shrivel up or topple over a few hours after appearing. Conocybe cyanopus Conocybe kuehneriana Conocybe smithii Genus Copelandia According to Rolf Singer's interpretation of the Coprinaceae family, genus Copelandia which includes more than 10 different species is one of at least three (sub)genera stemming from the traditional notion of the genus Panaeolus. Although some American mycologists strictly refer to the genus as Copelandia, most European mycologists prefer Panaeolus. At the moment the names of the species in both genera are used as synonims (e.g. Copelandia cyanescens = Panaeolus cyanescens etc.). The genus Copelandia was named by Italian mycologist Abbé Giacomo Bresadola (1847-1929) in honour of Edwin Bingham Copeland (1873-1964), an American research associate in botany who gathered fungi in the Philippines and presumably sent his collections - among which happened to be a bluing Panaeolus species - to Bresadola. Copelandias are black spored dung inhabiting tropical and subtropical mushrooms that readily bruise blue and feature a characteristic form of pleurocystidia. Copelandia affinis Copelandia anomala Copelandia bispora Copelandia cambodginiensis Copelandia chlorocystis Copelandia cyanescens Copelandia lentisporus Copelandia mexicana Copelandia tirunelveliensis Copelandia tropica Copelandia tropicalis Copelandia westii Genus Gymnopilus This genus contains around 200 rusty-orange spored mushroom species formerly divided among Pholiota and the defunct genus Flammula. The fruiting body is typically reddish brown to rusty orange to yellow, the cap is dry with small reddish fibers, taste is bitter and a veil is often present. The vast majority of species grow on wood but at times may appear terrestrial if it's buried or decomposed. Pholiota and Cortinarius are the genera most often confused with Gymnopilus. Pholiota, however, usually has a viscid cap and duller (brown to cinnamon brown) spores, and Cortinarius grows on the ground. To an untrained eye there are also similarities to the genus Galerina which contains some deadly poisonous mushrooms. Gymnopilus aeruginosus Gymnopilus luteofolius Gymnopilus spectabilis (= Gymnopilus junonius) Gymnopilus purpuratus Genus Inocybe With Inocybe, you are truly dancing with danger in a mycological minefield of edible, psychoactive, and toxic (primarily of the muscarinic type) mushrooms. In fact, Inocybe contains a higher percentage of poisonous species than any other major mushroom genus, including Amanita! Also, species in this genus are some of the most difficult to identify accurately, even for the most experienced mycologists. The late Dr. Daniel Stunz spent several decades studying this genus, and estimated 400-600 species, of which approximately 150 are recognized. Most Inocybes have not been tested for their edibility, toxicity, or psilocybin activity. Of those that have been tested, five species tested positive for psilocybin. Many species, including I. sororia, I. maculata, I. pudica, and I. geophylla, contain toxic levels of muscarine. None have yet been found to contain both psilocybin and muscarine, but there is no reason to believe that the compounds should be mutually exclusive. The best means of recognizing an Inocybe is by its characteristically silky, fibrillose, minutely scaly, and/or wooly cap which is often umbonate and seldom viscid. The spore colour is some shade of brown, and is generally duller than that of Cortinarius. In addition, most Inocybes have a noticeable odor - occasionally sweet or fruity as in I. pyriodora, but more often unpleasant (pungent, spermatic, fishy, or like fresh green corn but not often radishlike as in Hebeloma). Like Cortinarius, Inocybes are largely terrestrial and mycorrhizal and are a major fungal facet of temperate forests. Unlike Cortinarius, they are not the least bit colourful. They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites, with only I. lilacina (among the common species) deviating from the norm. Extreme caution is advised when dealing with this genus, as you are more likely to find one that is toxic before you will find one that is psilocybin active or innocuous. Inocybe aeruginascens Inocybe coelestium Inocybe corydalina Inocybe haemacta Genus Panaeolus Genus Panaeolus belongs to the family Coprinaceae. It is a relatively small genus of black spored little brown mushrooms with a bell shaped to conical cap and thin, brittle stalk. The sides of the gills often have a mottled or spotted appearance due to uneven maturation of the spore producing cells (basidia), but they do not deliquesce (a process of autodigestion whereby the cap is reduced to a black liquid) as in Coprinus. Psathyrellas are similar but do typically grow in decayed wood substrata and in soils, and those that grow in grass tend to have a convex cap and/or dark brown spores. Psilocybes and Conocybes are common in dung, but do not have black spores. Panaeolus is abundant in pastures, lawns, and manure heaps, fruiting whenever it's moist. It often mixes company with other species. There are no known poisonous mushrooms in this genus. Panaeolus africanus Panaeolus castaneifolius Panaeolus papilionaceus Panaeolus subbalteatus Genus Pluteus These pinkish-spored mushrooms have a central ringless stem that can be broken away from the cap with ease, and close gills, free at maturity. Being wood decomposers they grow almost exclusively on wood. The wood, however, may be buried or decomposed, making the mushrooms appear terrestrial. Most species have soft flesh and they decay rapidly. They are segregated primarily on microscopic features such as structure of the cap cuticle and the the shape of cystidia (sterile cells on the gills). Worldwide, there are over 100 members in this genus. Edibility of the five inactive Pluteus species described in David Arora's Mushrooms Demystified is either edible and good (P. petasatus, P. cervinus, P. lutescens) or unknown (P. longistriatus, P. flavofuligineus). Pluteus is frequently encountered but rarely abundant. They are most often confused with the pinkish, angular spored Entolomataceae, which are usually terrestrial with gills attached to the stem. Pluteus cyanopus Pluteus glaucus Pluteus salicinus Pluteus villosus Genus Psilocybe The genus Psilocybe contains roughly 180 small to medium-sized saprophytic mushroom species that can be found in a wide range of habitats: dungs, mosses, soils, grasslands, or decaying wood debris. When moist, most species have viscid, deep-brown caps that fade in drying to yellowish brown (i.e., are hygrophanous). The more active species, particularly those high in psilocin, bruise bluish where injured. The gills are usually dark brown in color with whitish edges, and range from being subdecurrent to acutely ascending in their attachments. Almost any LBM (Little Brown Mushroom) can be mistaken carelessly for a Psilocybe - with potentially disastrous results! A good spore print is crucial, as it will eliminate the brown spored genera (Galerina, Inocybe, Conocybe etc.), which contain many poisonous species. Among the dark-spored genera, Coprinus has deliquescing gills, Psathyrella typically has a non-viscid cap and never stains blue, Panaeolus species with a viscid cap grow on dung and have black spores, and Hypholoma (= Naematoloma) and Stropharia species are usually brightly coloured, while the cap colour in Psilocybe (with the notable exception of P. cubensis) is typically some shade of brown, gray, or buff. Psilocybe antioquensis Psilocybe arcana Psilocybe atlantis Psilocybe aucklandii Psilocybe australiana Psilocybe aztecorum Psilocybe azurescens Psilocybe baeocystis Psilocybe bohemica Psilocybe brasiliensis Psilocybe caerulescens Psilocybe caerulipes Psilocybe columbiana Psilocybe cubensis Psilocybe cyanescens Psilocybe cyanofibrillosa Psilocybe fimetaria Psilocybe heimii Psilocybe hispanica Psilocybe hoogshagenii Psilocybe mammillata Psilocybe mexicana Psilocybe moravica Psilocybe natalensis Psilocybe pelliculosa Psilocybe ovoideocystidiata Psilocybe portoricensis Psilocybe quebecensis Psilocybe samuiensis Psilocybe sanctorum Psilocybe semilanceata Psilocybe sierrae Psilocybe silvatica Psilocybe strictipes (= Psilocybe callosa) Psilocybe stuntzii Psilocybe subaeruginosa Psilocybe subcubensis Psilocybe tampanensis Psilocybe uxpanapensis Psilocybe weilii Psilocybe xalapensis Psilocybe zapotecorum Genus: Weraroa This genus of fungi are referred to as sequestrate fungi which means that they have lost there ability to forceful eject there spores. In stead they relies on insects and birds to eat and disperse them. Weraroa novea-zelandiae look it over. anyone want to add anything that may have been missed please do so. peace and love bloodworm
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maynardjameskeenan The white stipes Registered: 11/11/10 Posts: 16,391 Loc: 'Merica |
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Genus Copelandia
According to Rolf Singer's interpretation of the Coprinaceae family, genus Copelandia which includes more than 10 different species is one of at least three (sub)genera stemming from the traditional notion of the genus Panaeolus. Although some American mycologists strictly refer to the genus as Copelandia, most European mycologists prefer Panaeolus. At the moment the names of the species in both genera are used as synonims (e.g. Copelandia cyanescens = Panaeolus cyanescens etc.). The genus Copelandia was named by Italian mycologist Abbé Giacomo Bresadola (1847-1929) in honour of Edwin Bingham Copeland (1873-1964), an American research associate in botany who gathered fungi in the Philippines and presumably sent his collections - among which happened to be a bluing Panaeolus species - to Bresadola. Copelandias are black spored dung inhabiting tropical and subtropical mushrooms that readily bruise blue and feature a characteristic form of pleurocystidia. Copelandia affinis Copelandia anomala Copelandia bispora Copelandia cambodginiensis Copelandia chlorocystis Copelandia cyanescens Copelandia lentisporus Copelandia mexicana Copelandia tirunelveliensis Copelandia tropica Copelandia tropicalis Copelandia westii Genus Gymnopilus This genus contains around 200 rusty-orange spored mushroom species formerly divided among Pholiota and the defunct genus Flammula. The fruiting body is typically reddish brown to rusty orange to yellow, the cap is dry with small reddish fibers, taste is bitter and a veil is often present. The vast majority of species grow on wood but at times may appear terrestrial if it's buried or decomposed. Pholiota and Cortinarius are the genera most often confused with Gymnopilus. Pholiota, however, usually has a viscid cap and duller (brown to cinnamon brown) spores, and Cortinarius grows on the ground. To an untrained eye there are also similarities to the genus Galerina which contains some deadly poisonous mushrooms. Gymnopilus aeruginosus Gymnopilus luteofolius Gymnopilus spectabilis (= Gymnopilus junonius) Gymnopilus purpuratus Gymnopilus subpurpuratus Genus Inocybe With Inocybe, you are truly dancing with danger in a mycological minefield of edible, psychoactive, and toxic (primarily of the muscarinic type) mushrooms. In fact, Inocybe contains a higher percentage of poisonous species than any other major mushroom genus, including Amanita! Also, species in this genus are some of the most difficult to identify accurately, even for the most experienced mycologists. The late Dr. Daniel Stunz spent several decades studying this genus, and estimated 400-600 species, of which approximately 150 are recognized. Most Inocybes have not been tested for their edibility, toxicity, or psilocybin activity. Of those that have been tested, five species tested positive for psilocybin. Many species, including I. sororia, I. maculata, I. pudica, and I. geophylla, contain toxic levels of muscarine. None have yet been found to contain both psilocybin and muscarine, but there is no reason to believe that the compounds should be mutually exclusive. The best means of recognizing an Inocybe is by its characteristically silky, fibrillose, minutely scaly, and/or wooly cap which is often umbonate and seldom viscid. The spore colour is some shade of brown, and is generally duller than that of Cortinarius. In addition, most Inocybes have a noticeable odor - occasionally sweet or fruity as in I. pyriodora, but more often unpleasant (pungent, spermatic, fishy, or like fresh green corn but not often radishlike as in Hebeloma). Like Cortinarius, Inocybes are largely terrestrial and mycorrhizal and are a major fungal facet of temperate forests. Unlike Cortinarius, they are not the least bit colourful. They come in an endless, senseless procession of boring browns, yucky yellows, gratuitous grays, and wishy-washy whites, with only I. lilacina (among the common species) deviating from the norm. Extreme caution is advised when dealing with this genus, as you are more likely to find one that is toxic before you will find one that is psilocybin active or innocuous. Inocybe corydalina var. erinaceomorpha Inocybe aeruginascens Inocybe coelestium Inocybe corydalina Inocybe haemacta Inocybe tricolor Genus Panaeolus Genus Panaeolus belongs to the family Coprinaceae. It is a relatively small genus of black spored little brown mushrooms with a bell shaped to conical cap and thin, brittle stalk. The sides of the gills often have a mottled or spotted appearance due to uneven maturation of the spore producing cells (basidia), but they do not deliquesce (a process of autodigestion whereby the cap is reduced to a black liquid) as in Coprinus. Psathyrellas are similar but do typically grow in decayed wood substrata and in soils, and those that grow in grass tend to have a convex cap and/or dark brown spores. Psilocybes and Conocybes are common in dung, but do not have black spores. Panaeolus is abundant in pastures, lawns, and manure heaps, fruiting whenever it's moist. It often mixes company with other species. There are no known poisonous mushrooms in this genus. Panaeolus africanus Panaeolus castaneifolius Panaeolus papilionaceus Panaeolus cinctulus Panaeolus fimicola Panaeolus campanulatus Panaeolus bispora Panaeolus venezolanus Panaeolus tropicalis Panaeolus africanus Panaeolus microsporus Panaeolus retirugis Panaeolus cambodginiensis Panaeolus venezolanus Panaeolus rubricaulis Panaeolus moellerianus Panaeolus olivaceus Genus Pluteus These pinkish-spored mushrooms have a central ringless stem that can be broken away from the cap with ease, and close gills, free at maturity. Being wood decomposers they grow almost exclusively on wood. The wood, however, may be buried or decomposed, making the mushrooms appear terrestrial. Most species have soft flesh and they decay rapidly. They are segregated primarily on microscopic features such as structure of the cap cuticle and the the shape of cystidia (sterile cells on the gills). Worldwide, there are over 100 members in this genus. Edibility of the five inactive Pluteus species described in David Arora's Mushrooms Demystified is either edible and good (P. petasatus, P. cervinus, P. lutescens) or unknown (P. longistriatus, P. flavofuligineus). Pluteus is frequently encountered but rarely abundant. They are most often confused with the pinkish, angular spored Entolomataceae, which are usually terrestrial with gills attached to the stem. Pluteus cyanopus Pluteus glaucus Pluteus salicinus Pluteus villosus Genus Psilocybe The genus Psilocybe contains roughly 180 small to medium-sized saprophytic mushroom species that can be found in a wide range of habitats: dungs, mosses, soils, grasslands, or decaying wood debris. When moist, most species have viscid, deep-brown caps that fade in drying to yellowish brown (i.e., are hygrophanous). The more active species, particularly those high in psilocin, bruise bluish where injured. The gills are usually dark brown in color with whitish edges, and range from being subdecurrent to acutely ascending in their attachments. Almost any LBM (Little Brown Mushroom) can be mistaken carelessly for a Psilocybe - with potentially disastrous results! A good spore print is crucial, as it will eliminate the brown spored genera (Galerina, Inocybe, Conocybe etc.), which contain many poisonous species. Among the dark-spored genera, Coprinus has deliquescing gills, Psathyrella typically has a non-viscid cap and never stains blue, Panaeolus species with a viscid cap grow on dung and have black spores, and Hypholoma (= Naematoloma) and Stropharia species are usually brightly coloured, while the cap colour in Psilocybe (with the notable exception of P. cubensis) is typically some shade of brown, gray, or buff. Psilocybe acutipilea Psilocybe alutacea Psilocybe angustipleurocystidiata Psilocybe antioquensis Psilocybe arcana Psilocybe argentipes Psilocybe armandii Psilocybe atlantis Psilocybe aucklandii Psilocybe australiana Psilocybe aztecorum Psilocybe aztecorum var. bonetii Psilocybe azurescens Psilocybe baeocystis Psilocybe bohemica Psilocybe brasiliensis Psilocybe cabiensis Psilocybe caerulescens Psilocybe caerulipes Psilocybe caeruleoannulata Psilocybe columbiana Psilocybe cubensis Psilocybe cyanescens Psilocybe cyanofibrillosa Psilocybe dumontii Psilocybe fimetaria Psilocybe guatapensis Psilocybe heimii Psilocybe heliconiae Psilocybe hispanica Psilocybe hoogshagenii Psilocybe mammillata Psilocybe meridensis Psilocybe mexicana Psilocybe moravica Psilocybe natalensis Psilocybe pelliculosa Psilocybe pintonii Psilocybe paulensis Psilocybe paupera Psilocybe pericystis Psilocybe plutonia Psilocybe pseudobullacea Psilocybe ovoideocystidiata Psilocybe portoricensis Psilocybe quebecensis Psilocybe ramulosa Psilocybe rickii Psilocybe samuiensis Psilocybe sanctorum Psilocybe semilanceata Psilocybe sierrae Psilocybe silvatica Psilocybe strictipes (= Psilocybe callosa) Psilocybe stuntzii Psilocybe subaeruginosa Psilocybe subcubensis Psilocybe semiangustipleurocystidiata Psilocybe subacutipilea Psilocybe subhoogshagenii Psilocybe tampanensis Psilocybe subbrunneocystidiata Psilocybe subyungensis Psilocybe uxpanapensis Psilocybe uruguayensis Psilocybe weilii Psilocybe xalapensis Psilocybe yungensis Psilocybe zapotecorum Genus: Weraroa This genus of fungi are referred to as sequestrate fungi which means that they have lost there ability to forceful eject there spores. In stead they relies on insects and birds to eat and disperse them. Weraroa novea-zelandiae I made a couple of revision's to the list I hope you don't mind. -------------------- May you be well. May you be peaceful and at ease. May you be happy.
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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Quote: awesome. i just want to get a good solid starting point. anyone else care to chime in? open to all (as long as it is accurate). peace and love bloodworm
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NeoSporen Antibiotic cream Registered: 09/05/09 Posts: 4,265 Loc: Graham, WA Last seen: 3 months, 20 days |
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I'll add more as I dig them up
P. coprophila (Dennis 1970) P. fuliginosa (Murrill 1918) P. guilartensis (Guzma´n et al 1997) P. lateritia (Murrill 1918) ( P. montana) P .modesta (Minter et al 2001) ( P. phyllogena) P. pallidispora (Murrill, 1918) P. scatigena (Berkeley and Curtis 1868) P. venezuelana (Pegler 1983) -------------------- Having lived through an existence close to nature, one accepts the small and simple things as most important in life. Sun, wind, rain and snow. The sounds birds make, smells of fresh wild flowers. Love of all kinds, from friends and family, thy self and our neighbors. Beautiful sunrises to the darkest clouds dancing above in the sky. To forgive, learn, share and express. This is the only thing a man such as myself can ask for. What comes as the result is nothing short of the core of human existence, to truly live free in body and mind.
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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Quote: sweet! i'll be sure to get them all compiled together. keep em' coming. peace and love bloodworm
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NeoSporen Antibiotic cream Registered: 09/05/09 Posts: 4,265 Loc: Graham, WA Last seen: 3 months, 20 days |
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A few more not on your list.
Seciton Neocaledonicae Psilocybe aequatoriae Psilocybe naematoliformis Psilocybe neocaledonicum Psilocybe neorhombispora Psilocybe magnispora Psilocybe umbrina Psilocybe thailandensis Psilocybe overeemii Psilocybe aureicystidiata Psilocybe goniospora (From Cordisporae) Section Zapotecorum Psilocybe barrerae Psilocybe chaconii Psilocybe collybioides Psilocybe graveolens Psilocybe kumaenorum Psilocybe meridensis Psilocybe microcystidiata Psilocybe moseri Psilocybe muliercula -------------------- Having lived through an existence close to nature, one accepts the small and simple things as most important in life. Sun, wind, rain and snow. The sounds birds make, smells of fresh wild flowers. Love of all kinds, from friends and family, thy self and our neighbors. Beautiful sunrises to the darkest clouds dancing above in the sky. To forgive, learn, share and express. This is the only thing a man such as myself can ask for. What comes as the result is nothing short of the core of human existence, to truly live free in body and mind.
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NeoSporen Antibiotic cream Registered: 09/05/09 Posts: 4,265 Loc: Graham, WA Last seen: 3 months, 20 days |
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Section Stuntzae
Psilocybe jacobsii Psilocybe subaeruginascens (Guzman concept) Psilocybe subaeruginascens (Höhnel type) Psilocybe septentrionalis Psilocybe rostrata Psilocybe aerugineomaculans Psilocybe aquamarina Psilocybe mescaleroensis Psilocybe wayanadensis Section Semilanceatae Psilocybe carbonaria Psilocybe venenata Psilocybe liniformans var. americana Psilocybe liniformans var. liniformans Psilocybe glutinosa Section Aztecorum Psilocybe pseudoaztecorum Psilocybe natarajanii Section Cordisporae Psilocybe banderillensis (from Brunneocystidiatae) Psilocybe caerulescens var. ombrophila Psilocybe chiapanensis Psilocybe cordispora Psilocybe fagicola Psilocybe fuliginosa Psilocybe furtadoana Psilocybe goniospora Psilocybe guilartensis (from Brunneocystidiatae) Psilocybe herrerae Psilocybe hoogshagenii var. convexa Psilocybe keralensis Psilocybe laurae Psilocybe mesophylla Psilocybe novoxalapensis Psilocybe ochreata Psilocybe oaxacana Psilocybe papuana Psilocybe schultesii Psilocybe singularis Psilocybe subtropicalis Psilocybe subyungensis Psilocybe teofilae Psilocybe villarrealiae Psilocybe wrightii Psilocybe lonchophorus Psilocybe wassoniorum I'll add more tomorrow. Hope this helps The more rare species on that list will be hard to find any photos of, but I can provide micrographs for them -------------------- Having lived through an existence close to nature, one accepts the small and simple things as most important in life. Sun, wind, rain and snow. The sounds birds make, smells of fresh wild flowers. Love of all kinds, from friends and family, thy self and our neighbors. Beautiful sunrises to the darkest clouds dancing above in the sky. To forgive, learn, share and express. This is the only thing a man such as myself can ask for. What comes as the result is nothing short of the core of human existence, to truly live free in body and mind. Edited by NeoSporen (09/20/11 02:46 AM)
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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jesus. this is turning into quite the task.
with all of us working together though, i'm sure we can handle it. a lot of information. a lot of pictures. let's get it done guys and gals! peace and love bloodworm
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NeoSporen Antibiotic cream Registered: 09/05/09 Posts: 4,265 Loc: Graham, WA Last seen: 3 months, 20 days |
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I got tons more to add, I'm just kinda tired and still tripping a bit But I'll be sure to add all I can.
-------------------- Having lived through an existence close to nature, one accepts the small and simple things as most important in life. Sun, wind, rain and snow. The sounds birds make, smells of fresh wild flowers. Love of all kinds, from friends and family, thy self and our neighbors. Beautiful sunrises to the darkest clouds dancing above in the sky. To forgive, learn, share and express. This is the only thing a man such as myself can ask for. What comes as the result is nothing short of the core of human existence, to truly live free in body and mind.
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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Quote: u fucking rock man! i didn't know you were tripping tonight... hope the fungi treated you well! what and how much did you consume? i'm tripping thurs. night and then hunting all day fri. shit, i'll be hunting all week...but the fields should be on fire come thurs. or friday!! peace and love bloodworm
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NeoSporen Antibiotic cream Registered: 09/05/09 Posts: 4,265 Loc: Graham, WA Last seen: 3 months, 20 days |
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I ate about 40-50g of fresh stuntzii from my recent finds. Had to test out my first finds of the year Can't sleep, and not really tired, so I might as well do something
-------------------- Having lived through an existence close to nature, one accepts the small and simple things as most important in life. Sun, wind, rain and snow. The sounds birds make, smells of fresh wild flowers. Love of all kinds, from friends and family, thy self and our neighbors. Beautiful sunrises to the darkest clouds dancing above in the sky. To forgive, learn, share and express. This is the only thing a man such as myself can ask for. What comes as the result is nothing short of the core of human existence, to truly live free in body and mind.
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NeoSporen Antibiotic cream Registered: 09/05/09 Posts: 4,265 Loc: Graham, WA Last seen: 3 months, 20 days |
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Just a few more.
Section Cyanescens Psilocybe “cyanofranciscana” Psilocybe mairei Psilocybe tasmaniana Psilocybe eucalypta Psilocybe indica Psilocybe moravica var. moravica Psilocybe moravica var. sternberkiana Section Mexicanae Psilocybe albofimbriata Psilocybe galindoi (galindiii) Psilocybe jaliscana Psilocybe makarorae Psilocybe pileocystidiata -------------------- Having lived through an existence close to nature, one accepts the small and simple things as most important in life. Sun, wind, rain and snow. The sounds birds make, smells of fresh wild flowers. Love of all kinds, from friends and family, thy self and our neighbors. Beautiful sunrises to the darkest clouds dancing above in the sky. To forgive, learn, share and express. This is the only thing a man such as myself can ask for. What comes as the result is nothing short of the core of human existence, to truly live free in body and mind.
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bloodworm cube con·nois·seur Registered: 05/22/10 Posts: 10,926 Loc: 352 |
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Quote: fuckin' a man...SAWEET! can't wait to be looking at my own. good vibes man! Quote: NICE... peace and love bloodworm
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