Mild smell and taste.
Sticky/slimy cap.
Pholiota velaglutinosa?
Growing primarily under hemlock with some mixed yellow birch in mossy areas; some older caps decaying, becoming very dark.
4cm tall
Maple/birch/fir habitat
Same as https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/94738820
Not similar to anything else
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/99581821
Fungee obs
Cortinarius "sp-IN87"
DNA - ITS - Nanopore
Color on upper side a darker, richer red than shows on the photo. On dead conifer in wooded bog.
Bark deeply furrowed into longitudinal prisms
Growing from old glass on a very wet path in a mixed forest.
Apothecia are yellow 2mm in diameter with whitish stipe around 3mm.
Asci 8-spored, croziers(-).
Paraphyses filiform with highly refracting multiguttulate VBs.
Ascospores fusiform, multiguttulate, OCI=4-5, slightly bent, measured
(17.9) 19 - 21.1 (21.4) × (3.4) 3.9 - 4.3 (4.5) µm
Q = (4.4) 4.41 - 5.2 (5.8) ; N = 22
Me = 19.8 × 4.1 µm ; Qe = 4.8
So this sequence comes up as being very close (up to 100%) to a series of Chinese sequences of Metuloidea murashkinskyi. However, this species has not been found in North America. However, S. ocraceum sequences are only 97.74% similar to this collection. It might be worth checking into Metuloidea murashkinskyi
Hardwood forest, predominately oak.
Cap 1 cm, cream with darker spots, orange gills, stem striate, cream at apex, greenish-blue at base, spore print: pale, growing solo in the duff beside a poplar log with white pine, cedar, alder, and poplar nearby
On a beech stump. The third pic shows older versions. If anyone can suggest tests or other photos I can return. These aren’t going anywhere.
Genus Hypochnicium
98.5%+ matches to three Hypochnicium sequences from two sources. Other matches not close
100% match to sequences by Ammirati and Niskanen eg KJ421190. It is however also 100% identical with type material for Cortinarius flavescentipes so these two species are likely synonyms
Infecting inflorescence of Carex stricta. Most inflorescences in this entire population were infected and growing these little black smut fungi in place of viable fruits.
Clitopilus popinalis according to Kuo. Hemlock birch. Mealy odor. Bitter taste. Cap red in KOH. Average spore size 5 x 4.5 microns. Slightly roughened.
Red area with orange dots growing at the base of a tree.
Collected by a participant in the Ohio Mushroom Society’s 2019 summer foray.Cap and stem pure white when fresh and discoloring brown slowly after picking. Cap glabrous when fresh. Stem dry and smooth. Gills adnexed. Odor slightly sweet. All structures inamyloid. Clamps present in the pileipellis and at the base of basidia. Pileipellis an ixocutis. Lactifers present in the lamellar trama. Pleurocystidia and cheilocystidia absent. At least some basidia 4-sterigmate. Spores smooth, hyaline and thin-walled. Spore measurements: (6.6) 7 – 11.1 (11.9) × (3.9) 4.3 – 5.2 (5.6) µm, Q = (1.4) 1.5 – 2 (3.1); N = 30, Me = 8.4 × 4.7 µm; Qe = 1.8
Spores smooth with one large guttule, 16.5 - 20.1 x 12.5 - 14.8µm.
Asci 275-295 x 15-17.5µm.
Paraphyses somewhat enlarged and brown at ends, 5.5-7µm wide.
First Observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/117593303
Four days later http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/75616375
Seven days later http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/75618001
Nine days later http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/76338378
Note: Hard winds blown jar over earlier this day. Low humidity dried it out. Jar completely covered with spores on one side.
I'm not the individual who identified it. I posted it on Facebook group. It was light purple as the picture. Guills underneath. I know next to nothing about mushrooms. I love to photograph ithem. The man who identified it directed me to submit here. Thanks You fir your time.
Ceriporia manzanitae or C. occidentalis ? Growing on a decorticated alternately branched hardwood stick, probably Black cherry, Tulip tree or Sweetgum.
Growing from soil and moss at the base of an unidentified street tree: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/74568560
White spore print
I am not sure of this ID at all. I only found parts of a bunch of them. It looks like animals kept picking them and then not eating them. I found a bunch of partials in a general area. It doesn't smell like a mushroom at all. At one point I said soap. At another point I said cream. I am really bad at smell IDs.