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Artisticw4y
Explorer Adventurer


Registered: 01/15/24
Posts: 4
Loc: Florida, Levy
Last seen: 11 days, 16 hours
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Help with identifying possible lib caps?
#28621879 - 01/15/24 08:37 AM (12 days, 21 hours ago) |
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Habitat:moist cow pastures in Central Florida, 50 degree weather. In and around cow patties. Where does it grow? Eg. woods, pasture, state, province, country, altitude, etc. What does it grow on? Eg. soil, dung, wood (dead, living, what kind of wood?), etc.
Gills:gills Grey when young, brown when older. Color, attached/not, gills/pores, etc.
Stem:wirey, strong thin random cruvy same color as the cap- light rich yellowish bronze color. 2 to 3 inches in length. Length, diameter, color, texture, hollow/solid, thin/thick, etc.
Cap:1/4- 1.5 inch in diameter, light rich yellowish bronze, nipple looking saucer, has clear jelenous membrane on outside when torn. Dark edge at bottom of cap on some. Diameter, color, texture, conical/spherical, convex/concave, etc.
Spore print color:purple brown







 Very important!
Bruising:none Color that the mushroom bruises, if any.
Other information: Scent of the mushroom, anything else you think is important, large close-up pictures showing stem, cap and gills.
Edited by Artisticw4y (01/15/24 09:57 AM)
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Anglerfish
hearing things



Registered: 09/08/10
Posts: 18,641
Loc: Norvegr
Last seen: 2 hours, 8 minutes
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Looks like a Hypholoma species.
Welcome to the Shroomery.
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★★★★★
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Artisticw4y
Explorer Adventurer


Registered: 01/15/24
Posts: 4
Loc: Florida, Levy
Last seen: 11 days, 16 hours
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Re: Help with identifying [Re: Anglerfish]
#28622163 - 01/15/24 01:06 PM (12 days, 17 hours ago) |
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Hey thank you for responding. I looked into that and they didn't grow in clusters they grew apart and near one another. I know now to take photos prior. Also the stems are thin not thick as the Hypholoma species, the four I saw on Google anyway.
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Anglerfish
hearing things



Registered: 09/08/10
Posts: 18,641
Loc: Norvegr
Last seen: 2 hours, 8 minutes
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Depending on where in the world you are, they could perhaps be H. tuberosum.
Edit: I see now, central Florida. H. tuberosum appears to grow in your region, although I won't conclude that's the exact species you've got here.
Anyway, species in this genus can vary quite a bit in size and stature, and pictures found online aren't always representative.
Not liberty caps at any rate. They won't grow in Florida.
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★★★★★
Edited by Anglerfish (01/15/24 02:21 PM)
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Artisticw4y
Explorer Adventurer


Registered: 01/15/24
Posts: 4
Loc: Florida, Levy
Last seen: 11 days, 16 hours
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Re: Help with identifying [Re: Anglerfish]
#28622360 - 01/15/24 04:06 PM (12 days, 14 hours ago) |
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Thank you for your insight and time to respond. Do you think it could be a Deconica Species?
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Psilosadhu


Registered: 12/19/19
Posts: 1,886
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Quote:
Artisticw4y said: Thank you for your insight and time to respond. Do you think it could be a Deconica Species?
No. Hypholoma.
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