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TimmiT


Registered: 03/23/10
Posts: 5,303
Loc: Victoria
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ID req - garden Pan
#13417741 - 11/01/10 11:37 AM (13 years, 2 months ago) |
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After some recent rain there are lots of Panaeolus coming up from my veggie patch. They're mostly Panaeolus papilionaceus but this one looks odd. The garden bed is well fertilised with horse manure. It might just be an odd Pan pap. Any oppinions?
Unusual Panaeolus

Panaeolus papilionaceus pin

Can anyone guess what this is? 
-------------------- "Reality leaves a lot to the imagination" ~ John Lennon
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Mr. Mushrooms
Spore Print Collector


Registered: 05/25/08
Posts: 13,018
Loc: Registered: 6/04/02
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Re: ID req - garden Pan [Re: TimmiT]
#13417896 - 11/01/10 12:24 PM (13 years, 2 months ago) |
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Looks like something else to me too. Panaeolus sp. One name given to the others is Panaeolus campanulatus, indicating a bell-shaped cap. The odd duck is conical.
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St. Chibes
Shermanii


Registered: 02/11/10
Posts: 823
Loc: NC
Last seen: 8 years, 11 months
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Is that broccoli?
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   Check out my Original Instrumental Piece: Photinus pyralis
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist


Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 48,271
Last seen: 11 hours, 44 minutes
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Re: ID req - garden Pan [Re: TimmiT]
#13417936 - 11/01/10 12:35 PM (13 years, 2 months ago) |
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I think your Panaeolus is probably P. cinctulus.
Did you use any horse manure in your garden?
P. campanulatus was synonimized with P. papilionaceus by Gerhardt 1996.
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German Kahuna
Facepalmer of Stoopid



Registered: 10/31/08
Posts: 15,798
Loc: On a Chemical Vacation
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Quote:
TimmiT said: The garden bed is well fertilised with horse manure
I was thinking possibly P. cinctulus as well.
-------------------- "Vegetarian" [ /ˌvedʒəˈteəriən/] - Ancient slang meaning "village idiot who can't hunt, fish or ride".
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TimmiT


Registered: 03/23/10
Posts: 5,303
Loc: Victoria
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Quote:
St. Chibes said: Is that broccoli?
Yeah  I got carried away with the camera while I was out there
Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: I think your Panaeolus is probably P. cinctulus.
Did you use any horse manure in your garden?
P. campanulatus was synonimized with P. papilionaceus by Gerhardt 1996.
There's lots of horse manure in the garden. I often find Pan pap growing in my fields, but haven't found any other Panaeolus sp. The stem does look like a P. cinctulus stem.
-------------------- "Reality leaves a lot to the imagination" ~ John Lennon
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Mr. Mushrooms
Spore Print Collector


Registered: 05/25/08
Posts: 13,018
Loc: Registered: 6/04/02
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Quote:
German Kahuna said:
Quote:
TimmiT said: The garden bed is well fertilised with horse manure
I was thinking possibly P. cinctulus as well.
Safest guess considering it's appearance and the fact they are as common as they are. I can never find P. subbalteatus so I would never guess that.
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