Picked out of the drift line.
These cocoons were found clinging to walls and hanging from tables by a small spindly thread. Very plentiful. Tiny pieces of dried grass formed together into spiky beehive shapes. 1/4 inch to 1/2 inch in size. As you can see in the first photo, some sort of insect is emerging from the bottom tip.
First reported on Oahu in 1984. Only male moths have wings, the females are wingless an live entire life in a protective casing, releases eggs onto the ground. When the caterpillars hatch they eat grass and make their casings out of grass. They drag the casing behind them until it is large enough, at which point they climb up to a suitable spot and attach themselves to pupate. Males emerge to go find a mate, females remain living inside. (All info taken from HawaiiNatureJoutnal.weebly.com, Auntie Jeanne)
gps failed so large area radius
Is this crazy? For suresy flavescens on the right for comparison.
Under cypress (and among lots of poison oak)
Fruiting in needle litter(base attached to needles) beneath Douglas fir and Western red cedar. Did not note any Pacific Yew in vicinity.
Fruiting bodies translucent, waxy in appearance with corona like wavy margin. Stem bases staining faintly red where handled.
Harvested 4 specimens.
Laying all specimens directly on a glass slide to obtain spore drop.
Spore print: White.
Mounted spore printed slide in Lugol’s solution.
Spores: Subglobose to globose, very small. Greenish yellow to faintly blue in Lugol’s solution. Weakly amyloid.
Slide#2: carefully shaved a thin section of fertile tissue with straight razor and mounted directly on slide#2. Mounted tissue in KOH.
Basidia: 2 and 4 sterigmate analyzed.
Gloeocystidia: long, slender, very slightly clavate tips.
Dehydrated all specimens thoroughly and bagged for herbarium collection/genetic record.
My coinciding Mushroomobserver observation below-
Found and collected by @symbiiotica
On ground burnt by the 2013 rim fire.
They're back and thriving!
On conifer twig, from a snowlemt area at about 6500ft. My ID is a guess, happy to be corrected.
I’m trying to journal these little lichen cups.
fos- hope she stays around
.
Meola Reef Reserve, Point Chevalier, Auckland 1022. On twigs of Plagianthus divaricatus.
Santa Cruz mountains near Portola redwoods SP.
Odor mild and unpleasant, under monterey cypress.
Saw two coyotes trot through Fuchsia Dell. About ten minutes later we went through and saw one of them laying by a tree about 30 yards off the path. It was relaxed enough to take a little snooze and then got up to head out. While I was photographing this one, the other was in the area. Some passerby's saw the other one cross the path, but I didn't see it over the hour or so that we were in the area. After it's snooze, it got up and went on its way towards peacock meadows.
spores 5-7 angled, gill edge dark blue, cap umbilicate. CC clavate 30 x 14, spores 10 x 6um.
Under Pinus radiata.
On Douglas fir needles
spores inamyloid, subglobose 3 x 5 with apiculus. With cylindrical cheilocystidia, unclamped trama, basidia to 50um long., not siderophilous. Gills emarginate. Cutis an hymeniderm with extra cellular encrustation and intra-cellular pigment, sub cutis partially gelatinised. Spores length=3.6–4.8µm (µ=4.3, σ=0.33), width=3.4–4.4µm (µ=3.8, σ=0.31), Q=1.0–1.3µm (µ=1.14, σ=0.10), n=11
Black, approx 2 cm height
Deep chocolate brown with whitish spots about the periphery which are tomentose when observed close up.
Grows in clusters on dead wood. Stipe is separate from gills freckled with tomentum on lower half , gills pale brownish cream with regular pattern long short medium short long etc,.
Under beech forest habitat on fallen logs and dead tree roots.
Stem dry, cap viscid when wet. Under Picea sitchensis. No odor.
Near Gazos Mountain Camp in CZU Lightning Complex Fire Perimeter
Water Temp 28C
Depth 3+m
Size 3+mm
This young cap was quite hemispherical in shape and had dark squamules raised in ridges towards the margin. Cap size was 1.9 cm in diameter and 4 cm in height. The gills were cream with a concolorous gill edge. The stipe was light tan and was pruinose with a light powdery covering.
Amazing pattern on this mushroom growing inside dead log
Found growing gregriously at the base of puketea. Bioluminescent at night.
An absolutely stunning Entoloma sp. I found at Salt Point state park back in 2013 and have never seen it since.
On CA bay laurel