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gcs
Stranger
Registered: 05/13/15
Posts: 53
Last seen: 3 years, 8 months
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ID Request (Australia, Melbourne)
#21821387 - 06/17/15 11:13 PM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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Mushroom #1:
http://s1.postimg.org/oire59uq5/IMG_20150618_123626180_HDR.jpg http://s27.postimg.org/nwvs9e9r5/IMG_20150618_123657888.jpg
Habitat: Wood chips. Growing solitary.
Gills: Light brown/orange, adnexed.
Stipe: White, fibrous.
Cap: Light brown/orange (darker than the gills), convex.
Damage: No bruising on the cap or stipe. There seems to be cobwebs on the gills and stipe. There is also a white colouring around the rim of the cap.
Mushroom #2:
http://s9.postimg.org/r19fo0fm5/IMG_20150618_140326861.jpg
Habitat: Wood chips. Growing gregarious among another species.
Gills: Light brown, adnexed or free.
Stem: White, fibrous. Long.
Cap: Brown, conical.
Damage: Seems disfigured, some damage to the stem and cap. I didn't see any bruising.
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lucky77777
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Registered: 06/02/13
Posts: 13
Last seen: 6 years, 8 months
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: gcs]
#21821458 - 06/17/15 11:33 PM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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They both look like Galerina's to me..
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gcs
Stranger
Registered: 05/13/15
Posts: 53
Last seen: 3 years, 8 months
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: lucky77777]
#21821608 - 06/18/15 12:11 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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benefit
methodically mad



Registered: 03/20/12
Posts: 114
Loc: Oz
Last seen: 11 days, 15 hours
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: gcs]
#21822221 - 06/18/15 03:29 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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I'd go with subs from the picture and description. I see galerinas in your last picture but spore print, picture of gills and signs of blue bruising will seal the deal.
Of course wait for a TI - you don't want ingesting galerinas.
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gcs
Stranger
Registered: 05/13/15
Posts: 53
Last seen: 3 years, 8 months
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: benefit]
#21822536 - 06/18/15 07:05 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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It looks like two kinds of mushrooms in that last picture. There's the kind with the light orange cap and stem, and the other with brown cap and white stem. I assumed these were two different species.
Do you consider the Galerinas to be the light orange mushrooms, white-stemmed mushrooms, or both kinds?
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benefit
methodically mad



Registered: 03/20/12
Posts: 114
Loc: Oz
Last seen: 11 days, 15 hours
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: gcs]
#21826442 - 06/19/15 01:13 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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Well Subs are a lot more fiberous than galerinas. Galarinas have a damp and soft stem.
- Is it blueing? - What do the gills look like and spore print? - Is it fiberous?
If yes to the above, it's most likely P. Subs.
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CrocAu
Blind as a bat.

Registered: 09/03/13
Posts: 293
Loc: Moon
Last seen: 7 months, 16 days
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: benefit]
#21827153 - 06/19/15 08:22 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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TIs are on holidays?
they are not subs, even if you pretend that everything else might be sub like the gills colour is way wrong to be sub. the orange looking ones got to be galerinas, the brown ones i don't know but not subs, DO NOT EAT
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TimmiT


Registered: 03/23/10
Posts: 5,303
Loc: Victoria
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: gcs]
#21827207 - 06/19/15 08:40 AM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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They all look like the same species. They're either a Psathyrella or Tubaria (probably the former).
-------------------- "Reality leaves a lot to the imagination" ~ John Lennon
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gcs
Stranger
Registered: 05/13/15
Posts: 53
Last seen: 3 years, 8 months
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Re: ID Request (Australia, Melbourne) [Re: TimmiT]
#21830356 - 06/19/15 10:12 PM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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I didn't collect these and have no intention of eating them, I was interested in seeing what they were because I thought they were Psilocybe subaeruginosa, but they didn't have the dark bruises that I'm used to seeing (usually they have dark gray stains on the caps and blue stains on the stems). They had no bruising at all from what I could see. The stems were definitely fibrous, if you look at that last picture, you can see the fiber peeling off the stem.
TimmiT: I'll look into those genera, thanks.
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