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allaroundhunter
Stranger


Registered: 12/09/10
Posts: 100
Loc: between this and another ...
Last seen: 10 years, 5 months
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Morels and others
#14587180 - 06/09/11 07:14 PM (12 years, 7 months ago) |
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All found this week at 4000ft central sierra mountains.
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elprawn
Mushroom Guestimator



Registered: 10/17/09
Posts: 14,303
Loc: Ilford, England
Last seen: 2 years, 1 month
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The others may be Peziza, Galerina, Panaeolina and Agrocybe. Can't be certain, though.
Nice morels.
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The Thinker

Registered: 09/01/10
Posts: 4,000
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Re: Morels and others [Re: elprawn]
#14587283 - 06/09/11 07:40 PM (12 years, 7 months ago) |
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others are Sarcosphaera coronaria, Kuehneromyces, Panaeolina
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist


Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 48,276
Last seen: 11 hours, 35 minutes
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1) Black morel 2) Sarcosphaera coronaria 3) Black morels 4 - 5) Kuehneromyces vernalis 6 - 7) Panaeolina foenisecii
Nice pictures!
The Kuehneromyces vernalis is edible but looks extremely similar to Galerina marginata.
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sporeRider
Proud sporeRider :)


Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 5,030
Loc: usa
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Alan what latin name would you call black morels??????? is there any correct terminology????
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist


Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 48,276
Last seen: 11 hours, 35 minutes
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Morchella sp. is the most correct name at this time.
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sporeRider
Proud sporeRider :)


Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 5,030
Loc: usa
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Dammnit - Haha - thanks man really appreciate the quick response
Not tryin to derail the Op's thread - - - - - OP you got some BEAUTIES there man  
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allaroundhunter
Stranger


Registered: 12/09/10
Posts: 100
Loc: between this and another ...
Last seen: 10 years, 5 months
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Kuehneromyces vernalis hmmm so are the a good ediable cause i found millions in a logging area whats the difference between it and Galerina. Because my first thought was that they where Galerina.
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elprawn
Mushroom Guestimator



Registered: 10/17/09
Posts: 14,303
Loc: Ilford, England
Last seen: 2 years, 1 month
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Quote:
The Thinker said: others are Sarcosphaera coronaria, Kuehneromyces, Panaeolina
Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: 1) Black morel 2) Sarcosphaera coronaria 3) Black morels 4 - 5) Kuehneromyces vernalis 6 - 7) Panaeolina foenisecii
Nice pictures!
The Kuehneromyces vernalis is edible but looks extremely similar to Galerina marginata.
Thanks.
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist


Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 48,276
Last seen: 11 hours, 35 minutes
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I think you can differentiate with spore color, the spores in Galerina are rusty brown and Kuehneromyces has medium brown spores.
Its kind of scary to stake your life on the shade of brown so if I was going to eat it I would scope them first. Maybe that is not necessary though - G. marginata is rare to nonexistant in the sierras. I have never seen it there and neither has anyone on mushroomobserver.org.
It is interesting that the locations for G. marginata and B. rex-veris appear to be mutually exclusive.
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sporeRider
Proud sporeRider :)


Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 5,030
Loc: usa
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^^ damn Alan your the  of good info INDEED  Very neat to check those links out!! Thanks for sharing that
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tangoking
Lover of Boletes



Registered: 07/02/09
Posts: 952
Loc: New Jersey, USA
Last seen: 8 months, 17 days
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Quote:
Alan Rockefeller said: The Kuehneromyces vernalis is edible but looks extremely similar to Galerina marginata.
What sets it apart from G. marginata?
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elprawn
Mushroom Guestimator



Registered: 10/17/09
Posts: 14,303
Loc: Ilford, England
Last seen: 2 years, 1 month
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Re: Morels and others [Re: tangoking]
#14587905 - 06/09/11 09:44 PM (12 years, 7 months ago) |
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I'm guessing the umbo and the black stem are good macroscopic indicators.
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Alan Rockefeller
Mycologist


Registered: 03/10/07
Posts: 48,276
Last seen: 11 hours, 35 minutes
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Re: Morels and others [Re: tangoking]
#14588622 - 06/10/11 12:58 AM (12 years, 7 months ago) |
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Quote:
tangoking said: What sets it apart from G. marginata?
The spore print color is a different shade of brown. Slightly different stem texture. Plus many microscopic differences.
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Psilocybimater
Hunter of the Wild!


Registered: 06/07/11
Posts: 400
Last seen: 2 years, 4 months
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those morels look so tasty, they look to be a culinary delight.
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sporeRider
Proud sporeRider :)


Registered: 09/11/06
Posts: 5,030
Loc: usa
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ive heard the burn-site morels don't taste quite as good as ones found around more natural tree/woods habitats???????? Op or any PNW fellas agree or disagree-------- i do kno the ones i can buy at the grocery store seem to come from West coast burn site areas - and for $15 a quarter ( price does fluctuate ) they didn't have me hooked - -- - - - -- - the true blue WI morels just taste sooooooooooo good
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allaroundhunter
Stranger


Registered: 12/09/10
Posts: 100
Loc: between this and another ...
Last seen: 10 years, 5 months
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Mine seam to taste great to me.
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naturesrevolt
StrangerOfAwesome



Registered: 05/27/11
Posts: 681
Loc: Missouri
Last seen: 9 months, 24 days
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I love morel hunting. got a great cache of white ones this season and they were delicious. that black one up there looks tasty as well. I love to cook them with a steak and make a nice brown sauce using the mushroom and steak's drippings.
Edited by naturesrevolt (06/17/11 12:21 PM)
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