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#1 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Stockport
Posts: 1,333
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ID please
A friend has asked if I could ID this funghi. Any offers?
Thanks, Des. |
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#2 | |
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Registered Sane
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Posts: 443
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Quote:
These brownish yellow Hypholomas are not easy - they need careful examination of the spores and sundry muttered swear-words, but my best guess is Hypholoma polytrichi. This is typically a heathland or heathy woodland species, growing amongst mosses. I have also considered Entoloma pleopodium (a.k.a. Nolanea icterina), a very pretty pink-spored species, but the gills don't look like your fungus is pink-spored and E.pleopodium has a striate cap, at least when fresh. I'm plumping for Hypholoma polytrichi.
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#3 |
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Stockport
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Thanks for that Alan. I'd given up on getting an answer to this one!
Des. |
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: East Hampshire
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Quote:
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#5 |
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Location: Stockport
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The only other info I have is that it was growing in a garden lawn, in early July in England. I didn't actually see it myself.
I think my friend was more concerned as to whether it might be dangerous to children or pets if eaten as it was growing in his garden. Des. |
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#6 | |
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Registered Sane
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Renfrewshire, Scotland
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Quote:
It occurs to me that there is another possibility that I didn't think of - it may have been an Agrocybe species, quite possibly A. semiorbicularis. They have dull brown spores and several are small, neat and grow in grass, though usually rather dry grass, as on dunes or on wasteground. But as usual, one needs microscope characters to separate these things. It doesn't look like anything dangerous!
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Alan J. Silverside This post is guaranteed suitable for those allergic to emoticons. Last edited by Silver : Wednesday 22nd September 2004 at 01:04. |
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