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Rrrr266
Stranger
Registered: 03/10/19
Posts: 13
Loc: Turkey
Last seen: 2 years, 2 months
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ID requests, SW Turkey
#25935687 - 04/15/19 09:10 AM (4 years, 11 months ago) |
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Hello everyone. I am an experienced hunter of local edible mushrooms that are kinda hard to misidentify but almost clueless about little brown ones, always assumed them all poisonous and never paid much attention to them before. I recently learned that there many psilocybin containing mushrooms in Turkey. This catalogue and a pretty good book on edible mushrooms of Turkey I got confirm that(without much info tho). So I went on quite a long trip yesterday to pay the attention to little brownies they deserves yet I couldn't spot many. I know it might not be the best time of year so I am planning make many more trips next autumn, hopefully with a better camera, and post my findings here.
All four species below were spotted yesterday(14th april) past two sunny/cloudy days after heavy rains in southwestern anatolia. I will not eat any of them so wild guesses are welcome.
Habitat: horse dung Cap: approx. 2-4cm in diameter, orange/brown on the center, sticky Stem: fibrous, brittle Scent: metallic/rusty iron Spore print: black, brown for younger specimens with beige gills Comment: not bruising. The ones in the second pic were very dehydrated. guessing agrocybe or panaeolus but the latter is likely just my uneducated bias lol
Habitat: horse dung. Cap: 1-3cm in diameter. Very thin and fragile, yellow to orange on the center. Sticky when wet. Stem: super thin, not brittle. Spores: yellow to light brown. Scent: nothing distinct. Comment: my guess is coprinellus sp. Might be wrong.
Habitat: soil with decaying wood and leaves. Cap: 1 cm in diameter Scent: nothing at all. Spores: couldn't get anything, possibly white? Comment: would be surprising if anyone can ID these tiny fellas.
Habitat: grassland manured by cows Cap: 3-7cm in diameter Stem: has an epic ring, fibrous Scent: not distinctive, mushroomy. Comment: they look like agaricus or amanitas to me. Much more abundant in autumn and they love to hang out with wild agaricus bisporuses. Always been told they are just poisonous because white gills = poisonous but reading about mushrooms taught me all generalizations about fungi are wrong so that could be wrong as well.
That is all for now. Thanks in advance.
Edited by Rrrr266 (04/15/19 12:55 PM)
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Duggstar
Registered: 01/20/09
Posts: 6,273
Loc: Ireland
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
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Re: ID requests, SW Turkey [Re: Rrrr266]
#25935821 - 04/15/19 10:39 AM (4 years, 11 months ago) |
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1. Protostropharia semiglobata. 2. Bolbitius titubans. 3. Psathyrella sp. 4. What colour is the spore print? Can the ring slide up and down the stem or is it attached to it? Is there any noticeable bruising or staining when you cut or injure it?
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Rrrr266
Stranger
Registered: 03/10/19
Posts: 13
Loc: Turkey
Last seen: 2 years, 2 months
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Re: ID requests, SW Turkey [Re: Duggstar]
#25936083 - 04/15/19 12:40 PM (4 years, 11 months ago) |
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Quote:
Duggstar said: 1. Protostropharia semiglobata. 2. Bolbitius titubans. 3. Psathyrella sp. 4. What colour is the spore print? Can the ring slide up and down the stem or is it attached to it? Is there any noticeable bruising or staining when you cut or injure it?
Wow nice! The last one's ring is attached. I didn't make a spore print but they bruise a faint yellow if that helps.
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Duggstar
Registered: 01/20/09
Posts: 6,273
Loc: Ireland
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
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Re: ID requests, SW Turkey [Re: Rrrr266]
#25936436 - 04/15/19 03:20 PM (4 years, 11 months ago) |
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Compare to Macrolepiota excoriate. Actually I think it looks too small to be that species, could be Lepiota. Could you take closer in-focus pics and take measurements of the cap and stem?
Edited by Duggstar (04/15/19 05:10 PM)
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Rrrr266
Stranger
Registered: 03/10/19
Posts: 13
Loc: Turkey
Last seen: 2 years, 2 months
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Re: ID requests, SW Turkey [Re: Duggstar]
#25937493 - 04/16/19 05:17 AM (4 years, 11 months ago) |
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No, I didn't keep it. I'll go get the little one in the weekend and bump this thread with more info.
They indeed look like a macrolepiota species. Spore colour will help a lot to pinpoint. I already know they don't grow very tall tho. Maybe 15cm max.
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