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ShimmyConga
Stranger
Registered: 04/28/15
Posts: 10
Last seen: 8 years, 4 months
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Pluteus Sp.
#21944483 - 07/14/15 11:01 PM (8 years, 6 months ago) |
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Can I get some clarification as to what this falls under in the pluteus genus? The first two photos were from a separate outting as the rest but they appear to be the same species. There's no bruising but as I understand it p. Salicinus doesn't always display bruising due to the low amount of psilocybin. Sorry for the photo quality. Also worth noting that the first two were grayish blue caps. Anyone care to chime in?
Edited by ShimmyConga (07/14/15 11:03 PM)
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o8u
Taxa Collector


Registered: 10/30/12
Posts: 4,148
Loc: United States
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None of those look like a Pluteus species. The first one looks like it could be a Clitocybe species.
Edited by o8u (07/14/15 11:09 PM)
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ShimmyConga
Stranger
Registered: 04/28/15
Posts: 10
Last seen: 8 years, 4 months
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Re: Pluteus Sp. [Re: o8u]
#21944591 - 07/14/15 11:23 PM (8 years, 6 months ago) |
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So it seems. I was under the impression there were no blue clitocybe but I guess I was wrong. Thanks!
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RuralAnomaly
Sporadic



Registered: 10/05/13
Posts: 2,153
Loc: Spitzenkörper Ohio
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i think pluteus gills are usually unmistakably free and these do not appear that way.
you might try to start with that as a feature to ID rather than color. they also grow from wood rather than terrestrial.
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EnergyTurtle
Moped Freak


Registered: 07/15/15
Posts: 281
Loc: Colorado
Last seen: 4 years, 8 months
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I've read that most Pluteus (the active species anyway) have a distinct pink to salmon-pink spore print. Is this true for the Pluteus genus in general?
-------------------- "You decadent pig. Where the fuck do you get the nerve to go around telling those wops that I'm crazy? You worthless cocksucker. My Italian tour is already arranged for next spring & I'm going to do the whole goddamn trip wearing a bright red field marshal's uniform & accompanied by six speed-freak bodyguards bristling with Mace bombs & when I start talking about American writers & the name Tom Wolfe comes up, by god, you're going to wish you were born a fucking iguana!" - Hunter S. Thompson, 03/03/71 Letter to Tom Wolfe.
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Byrain

Registered: 01/07/10
Posts: 9,664
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Yes, all Pluteus and some other genera such as Entoloma and Volvopluteus have salmon-pink spores. Most genera are limited to a single spore print color or a range of colors (ie Brownish/purple to blackish/purple in Psilocybe), the only exception of this I can think of from the top of my head is Chlorophyllum where all species will have white spores except C. molybdites which has green spores.
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