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Well Gabriela, m3 looks a bit like some gasteromycetes I know (and dare to eat) but I never eat any mushroom I don't know!
Neither do I Trond; the only mushroom I collected and consumed is the giant puffball - no one I think can mistaken it for something else! Quite rare unfortunately and I read is a special concern species in Norway.http://www.kew.org/science-conservation/plants-fungi/calvatia-gigantea-giant-puffball
As I said, today I found a lot of mushrooms. I only know the first one which is an Amanita of some sort. The other ones, I named them m1-m4
A contribution to this thread taken at Awarua Bay near Invercargill. This particular site can be rather bleak. It is an old gravel quarry; the substrate is quartz peebles with very little soil....Cladia retipora...Cladia retipora; this is a very lovely and distinctive lichen....Cladonia confusa; another common and distinctive lichen. The next picture is Dibaeis arcuata with the lovely stalked fruiting bodies.
Hi GarbrielaI've not been a regular visitor to the forum this autumn so missed this post.Your Amanita is possibly A. rubescens (the Blusher), but can't be certain.M1 is Armillaria mellea (Honey Fungus).M2 is Hygrocybe helobia.M3 is Lycoperdon pyriforme (Stump Puffball) as Ian suggested.M4 is a Cortinarius - a vast genus of several hundred species. The purple colour would narrow it down to 2 or 3 dozed. I'm envious of all your woodland and fungi.
All these lichens are so incredible beautiful David and Trond! Too bad we cannot cultivate them.
Thank you very much! I wrote the names in my files, so next year I'll know better. The woodland at this point is as enchanting as in the spring time. It's been quite dry this year but still a lot of mushrooms. Here are a few more.
Gabriela, Are you sure? Most (all) lichens will regrow from pieces. I am sure many can be grown in a garden if you try!
Ah, more fungi to drool over!1. Amanita muscaria var. formosa - the yellow form of the common Fly Agaric. If you look closely you will see some red blushing on some caps.2. Hygrocybe acutoconica3. Xeromphalina campanella - (Mycena, almost without exception, are conical in shape and usually pale in colour).4. Can't place this one but feel it has to be another Amanita.
Thanks again - I must find more mushrooms for you I've corrected the 'Mycena'. The only guide in the house is - Mushrooms of Ontario and Eastern Canada; I must rectify this discriminatory situation How about a Pholiota for the unknown?