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shroomlowie



Registered: 07/12/13
Posts: 265
Last seen: 6 months, 27 days
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Panaeolus Cinctulus finds
#18843383 - 09/15/13 04:25 AM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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I'm pretty sure I've found 9 Panaeolus Cinctulus, one family of around 6 and another smaller family of 3. They were growing on hard dirt that I think used to be a corn field or similar; all of which was already harvested.
Here's a pic of all of which I found, as you can see the spore prints are feint but they look jet black, no hint of brown.

Spore prints up close:

Gills:

Caps a little closer up, all of these images were took around 5 hours after picking. The zonates are not as apparent as they were when first picked.

Lastly, could anyone help me distinguish these from Foenisecii? I found a lot of similar capped mushrooms but the stem didn't quite fit with these that were found on dry dirt; the what I believe to be Foenisecii was in the hundreds on grass that is used often by dog walkers.
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Blue-FunGuy
The Bad Pungi


Registered: 03/05/10
Posts: 5,365
Loc: Northeast
Last seen: 8 years, 1 month
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Re: Panaeolus Cinctulus finds [Re: shroomlowie]
#18843604 - 09/15/13 07:50 AM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Panaeolus cinctulus Manure is often used to fertilize corn fields and probably why you found em there.
Quote:
shroomlowie said: Lastly, could anyone help me distinguish these from Foenisecii? I found a lot of similar capped mushrooms but the stem didn't quite fit with these that were found on dry dirt; the what I believe to be Foenisecii was in the hundreds on grass that is used often by dog walkers.
Foes only grow from grass,cinctulus have darker mottled gills with a black spore print,stems bruise redish and they smell different.
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shroomlowie



Registered: 07/12/13
Posts: 265
Last seen: 6 months, 27 days
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Re: Panaeolus Cinctulus finds [Re: Blue-FunGuy]
#18843622 - 09/15/13 07:59 AM (10 years, 4 months ago) |
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Quote:
Blue-FunGuy said: Panaeolus cinctulus Manure is often used to fertilize corn fields and probably why you found em there.
Quote:
shroomlowie said: Lastly, could anyone help me distinguish these from Foenisecii? I found a lot of similar capped mushrooms but the stem didn't quite fit with these that were found on dry dirt; the what I believe to be Foenisecii was in the hundreds on grass that is used often by dog walkers.
Foes only grow from grass,cinctulus have darker mottled gills with a black spore print,stems bruise redish and they smell different.
Thanks for that Blue-FunGuy 
Quote:
Blue-Funguy said: Foes only grow from grass
I understand this, but Cinctulus are also found on grass which is why I have trouble distinguishing the two species.
As I get more experienced I'm sure I'll be able to tell the two apart, as for now I'd say I'm still getting there. Thanks for the help nonetheless
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