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CaliforniaLove
BlackIce



Registered: 08/08/09
Posts: 244
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
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A Whole Bunch of IDs Needed.
#11413773 - 11/08/09 10:06 PM (8 years, 5 months ago) |
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Well, after a nice long day of hunting in the bay area I have a ton of mushrooms that are in need of identifying. So a big thank you in advance to helper posters. These were all found in northern california...at the very least i would like to know if they are active, poisonous or edible but the name/sp. would also be nice!....please note the numbers before each individual one
1. Habitat: growing on a log that seemed healthy in a pine forest
Gills: slightly yellow
Stem: short and fat, hallow, vertical lines, flesh colored inside
Cap: conical, spotting from top down, spots are redish brown
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: redish brown
Other information: growing alone and is very meaty...has a web like thin cover on bottom peeling away (view pic)


2.Habitat: growing on the floor of a pine forest in mixed wood chips
Gills: no gills they are pores that are brown yellowish
Stem: thick and meaty
Cap: conical dark top to lighter brown. dark brown ring around the edge
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: redish brown
Other information: none

3.
Habitat: growing on the floor of a pine forest around decaying pine tree
Gills: white and spread out
Stem: thick and meaty also the inside is the same color as the gils
Cap: conical very dark top and seems to be wet and sicky all the time
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: view stem pic below
Other information: the stem and cap are very moist and the cap is still wet after a few hours of being picked

4. Habitat: growing on the floor of a pine forest in grass and some weeds
Gills: white and close together
Stem: not thin not thick is hallow and same color as the cap
Cap: wavy convex when young and concave when mature
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: none
Other information: this whole mushie has a varying color of light to dark orange



5. Habitat: growing on the floor of a pine forest
Gills: white
Stem: thinner hallow and slightly darker than the cap longer stem
Cap: conical almost concave when mature...slightly darker in center
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: none
Other information: grew in clusters and single..found lots 



6. Habitat: growing on the floor of a pine forest
Gills: white and slightly brown
Stem: short and thinner hallow
Cap: bumpy darker brown very minor spotting
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: none
Other information: nothing too special



7. Habitat: growing in and around rotting tree stumps
Gills: yellow greenish
Stem: long thinner wavy same color as cap hallow
Cap: yellow toward rim and orangeish at top convex
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: maybe...some brownish red...again maybe it is bruising
Other information: these were growing in wood chips on decaying wood and in the actual tree stump, grew in clusters....below are pics of a range of maturity




8. Habitat: growing on the bottom of a pine forest
Gills: brown
Stem: long thin same color as cap
Cap: convex light and dark brown and kinda shiny....gets darker around rim
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: none yet
Other information: very picture perfect type of mushie
 9. Habitat: growing on the bottom of a pine forest and in grassy area did not grow in clusters
Gills: white and light brown
Cap: light brown convex and pointy
Stem: skinny curvy and notconical has vertical line and minor cracking at edge
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: none yet
Other information: these are relatively small but grew over an entire grass portion of the forest



10. Habitat: in heavy grass type forest
Gills: very close together and whiteish brown
Stem: skinny but rather tall hallow and strong
Cap: dark brown not a perfect circle a tiny bit wavy when mature some hav e white around rim
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: none yet
Other information: they grew individually and have a very unique dark brown


11. Habitat: bottom of pine forest mixed with some grass
Gills: dark brown
Stem: thick meaty and relatively tall
Cap: light brown
Spore print color: none yet
Bruising: was redish when wet around the rim
Other information: was growing by itself and is huge
Edited by CaliforniaLove (11/08/09 10:35 PM)
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CaliforniaLove
BlackIce



Registered: 08/08/09
Posts: 244
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
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sry about the large photos i am going through now to give thumbnails
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Ieponumos
Mycophile/Phytophile


Registered: 09/02/09
Posts: 4,850
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I like your Smith & Wesson SWAT knife.
In the bunch I saw some Hypholomas, what looked like a Tricholoma, some Psatyrelaas, and one or two others I didn't eyeball.
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist



Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 44,165
Last seen: 1 hour, 11 minutes
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1) Gymnopilus, probably luteofolius. They like pine logs. 2) Suillus 3) Maybe Gomphidius 4) Rhodocollybia butyracea 5) Hypholoma fasciculare. Though the large picture is something else. 6) Gymnopus dryophilus 7) Hypholoma fasciculare 8) Psathyrella 9) Mycena 11) Agaricus
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CaliforniaLove
BlackIce



Registered: 08/08/09
Posts: 244
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
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Re: A Whole Bunch of IDs Needed. [Re: Ieponumos]
#11414026 - 11/08/09 10:36 PM (8 years, 5 months ago) |
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ok the thumbs shud be fixed....
thanx i love that knife...are you naming ones that u think mine are or ones u found?
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CaliforniaLove
BlackIce



Registered: 08/08/09
Posts: 244
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
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Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: 1) Gymnopilus, probably luteofolius. They like pine logs. 2) Suillus 3) Maybe Gomphidius 4) Rhodocollybia butyracea 5) Hypholoma fasciculare. Though the large picture is something else. 6) Gymnopus dryophilus 7) Hypholoma fasciculare 8) Psathyrella 9) Mycena 11) Agaricus
5 and 7 are not the same...the color shape and even smell are different
and how about 4 being cyans?
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Ieponumos
Mycophile/Phytophile


Registered: 09/02/09
Posts: 4,850
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Quote:
CaliforniaLove said:
Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: 1) Gymnopilus, probably luteofolius. They like pine logs.
and how about 4 being cyans?
I'd take Alan's judgment on the matter of #4. I'd be all over #1 though, It's most likely active.
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist



Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 44,165
Last seen: 1 hour, 11 minutes
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Quote:
Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: 5) Hypholoma fasciculare. Though the large picture is something else.
5 and 7 are not the same...the color shape and even smell are different
So you are saying 5 is not a mixed collection and it has white gills. Definitely something else then, maybe Gymnopus but probably not.
Quote:
and how about 4 being cyans?
I would be happy to tell you that 4 are cyans. Just let me know if you want me to do that. But it would not change them from Rhodocollybia into Psilocybe.
And then a whole lot of people would start bitching because they only look like cyans from the top, once you flip it over they look nothing like cyans.
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CaliforniaLove
BlackIce



Registered: 08/08/09
Posts: 244
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
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7 has a much sweeter smell than 5... 7 is much more yellow and has yellow gills 5 has white gills. 7 has wavy stems and 5 is straight plus 7 has a bit of red in it heres a side by side pic but it does not do much justice for these have both been picked for a while

ok well those were just my thoughts about 4
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CaliforniaLove
BlackIce



Registered: 08/08/09
Posts: 244
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area
Last seen: 7 years, 6 months
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i also remember 4 having some kind of "fur" underneath but it was very little
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