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St. Chibes
Shermanii
Registered: 02/11/10
Posts: 823
Loc: NC
Last seen: 9 years, 1 month
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Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please
#14135594 - 03/17/11 07:50 AM (13 years, 15 days ago) |
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11-6-10 Rowan Co., NC USA
I don’t have any measurements I just thought the black-edges of the lamellae were really cool.
Habitat: Growing from leaf litter or soil in mixed, predominantly hardwood forest.
Pileus: Convex with central depression, Smooth, Creamy or tan
Lamellae: Creamy-White with black edges, Adnexed, Distant to subdistant
Stipe: Fragile, Concolorous with pileus, Smooth
If anyone could suggest a genus, it’d be appreciated. Thanks
Sorry, the photos aren't that great.
-------------------- Check out my Original Instrumental Piece: Photinus pyralis
Edited by St. Chibes (03/17/11 10:13 AM)
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TimmiT
Registered: 03/23/10
Posts: 5,303
Loc: Victoria
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Re: Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please [Re: St. Chibes]
#14136065 - 03/17/11 10:32 AM (13 years, 15 days ago) |
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Cool find
How about Entoloma subserrulatum (aka Leptonia subserrulata)
-------------------- "Reality leaves a lot to the imagination" ~ John Lennon
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St. Chibes
Shermanii
Registered: 02/11/10
Posts: 823
Loc: NC
Last seen: 9 years, 1 month
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Re: Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please [Re: TimmiT]
#14136173 - 03/17/11 10:58 AM (13 years, 15 days ago) |
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Quote:
TimmiT said: Cool find
How about Entoloma subserrulatum (aka Leptonia subserrulata)
That's what's up man! Thanks for checking into that for me! I think you hit the nail on the head with this ID. I didn't take a spore print so I was kinda lost. Thanks again bro.
-------------------- Check out my Original Instrumental Piece: Photinus pyralis
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TimmiT
Registered: 03/23/10
Posts: 5,303
Loc: Victoria
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Re: Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please [Re: St. Chibes]
#14136265 - 03/17/11 11:23 AM (13 years, 15 days ago) |
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You're welcome. It looks like a good match.
There's a basic description in this ancient key (to subtribe Pluteanae ) under the name Leptoniella subserrulata
-------------------- "Reality leaves a lot to the imagination" ~ John Lennon
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inski
Cortinariologist
Registered: 02/28/06
Posts: 5,768
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Re: Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please [Re: St. Chibes]
#14136274 - 03/17/11 11:24 AM (13 years, 15 days ago) |
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Nice mushrooms, most Entoloma species with dark lamellar margins are some shade of blue, green-blue, grey or very dark, almost black.
The dark margin means that you have densely clustered cheilocystidia that have plasmatic pigment, it can be seen through your scope in a KOH mount!
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The Thinker
Registered: 09/01/10
Posts: 4,000
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Re: Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please [Re: inski]
#14136532 - 03/17/11 12:27 PM (13 years, 15 days ago) |
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Those are nice indeed, did you collect any for micro work?
These would be cool to see
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St. Chibes
Shermanii
Registered: 02/11/10
Posts: 823
Loc: NC
Last seen: 9 years, 1 month
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Re: Black-Edged Lamellae - ID Please [Re: TimmiT]
#14142915 - 03/18/11 12:12 PM (13 years, 14 days ago) |
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Quote:
The Thinker said: Those are nice indeed, did you collect any for micro work?
No and I regret that I didn't collect them because I would loooove to look at them under the scope. I found these before I had a scope (back in early November) so I wasn't thinking about microscopy.
Quote:
inski said: Nice mushrooms, most Entoloma species with dark lamellar margins are some shade of blue, green-blue, grey or very dark, almost black.
The dark margin means that you have densely clustered cheilocystidia that have plasmatic pigment, it can be seen through your scope in a KOH mount!
Grrr. I totally wish I would have collected these for study! I have no clue why I didn't. The densely clustered cheilocystidia with plasmatic pigment that you describe sound super interesting. Oh well, I'll be stomping around the same area this fall so maybe they'll pop up again. (I'll keep my fingers crossed) I found them right beside one of the trails I made near a swampy/boggy area, so I'll remember where to look.
Quote:
TimmiT said: You're welcome. It looks like a good match.
There's a basic description in this ancient key (to subtribe Pluteanae ) under the name Leptoniella subserrulata
Ancient indeed! 1917 Thanks for the link.
-------------------- Check out my Original Instrumental Piece: Photinus pyralis
Edited by St. Chibes (03/18/11 12:16 PM)
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