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Strictipes
Stranger
Registered: 06/09/15
Posts: 1
Last seen: 8 years, 5 months
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panaeolus cinctulus
#21847271 - 06/23/15 07:14 PM (8 years, 7 months ago) |
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After much research we are still unsure of whether this collection belongs to Cinctulus or panaeolina foenisecii.
Caps were a variety of shades between dark brown, tan, and beige. Some were solid in color and others had the characteristic zonate rings. Umbonate with upcurled edges in the mature specimens, hemispherical/conical in the younger ones.
The stalks were pale beige/off white toward the cap and darker brown toward the base. They were hollow, with faint vertical lines, and the characteristic white fuzzy mycelium at the base. We did not observe any significant bruising, extremely faint blue if at all (perhaps just wishful thinking).
Gills were close but not crowded. I have read that a prominent feature of Paneaolus was mottled gills (color patches). However i'm pretty sure (I have a habit of doubting myself in these situations) I only observed solid colored gills. They had the typical 3 tiered pattern: long, short, medium, short.
Habitat: We had this one picked out 2 weeks prior to fruiting. Our neighborhood had a newly installed sodded lawn with a sprinkler system and them BOOM, big rain, next day hundreds.
As for the spore print pics, its hard to tell from the lighting but I can asure you the print labeled #6 is JET BLACK (it looked like soot from a propane burner). The others were not as thick and therefore harder to determine.
At any rate, Has anyone experienced this before? We're almost positive we've at least found an edible species but we were hoping an experienced hunter could shed some light on the matter. Do we have a hallucinogenic mushroom here?
We have already performed proper procedure for drying and preserving.
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psilocyclops
Newb



Registered: 12/08/13
Posts: 607
Loc: PNW
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I'd say most if not all of those are foenisecii, based on the lack of mottled gills and the lack of jet black spores, as well as the color of the stem and the fact that the stem fibers seem more vertical and straight rather than gnarly and twisted. Also when you find Cinctulus there will often be black balls of spores on the stem that is immediately below the cap.
-------------------- You must have eaten, like, a hundred bucks worth of pot, and, like, 30 bucks worth of shrooms man.
2020 mystery seed indoor LED grow https://www.growery.org/forums/showflat.php/Number/846644
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Ludipro
Hobbyist


Registered: 10/01/13
Posts: 343
Last seen: 1 year, 1 month
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all panaeolus are edible and they look like cints to me. wait for a TI
 notice any bluing on them?
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