Field Guide

The Nebraska Mushrooms field guide is a full collection of species observed in Nebraska and catalogued on this website. Each species includes a common name (if available), scientific name, up to three images, and a description. See the example field guide page below.

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Example field guide

American Blusher
American Blusher
American Blusher

American Blusher

Amanita amerirubescens

The American Blusher is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in Oak and Pine-dominated woods mostly during the summer but also into early fall. It is a gilled mushroom that can be found in the soil, has large membranous skirt, and has a bulbous base without a volva. It stains red.

This species hasn't been described formally in North America yet, and is under the provisional name Amanita "rubescens-02".

July 24, 2023 Field Characteristics

  • Growing solitarily in open mixed oak/hickory woodland, near edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Black Oak, Bur Oak, Eastern Red Cedar, American Hackberry, Ash and Black Walnut.
  • Cap tan with reddish hues, also adorned with tan universal veil remnants (easily removable).
  • Lamellae white and crowded, staining red.
  • Margin staining red (lightly).
  • Stipe thick, with prominent annulus, bruising reddish from top 1/4 down to base.
  • Volva tan concentric bands on a swollen base, with white basal mycelium.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: pleasant, almost nutty.
Smooth Patch Disease
Smooth Patch Disease
Smooth Patch Disease

Smooth Patch Disease

Aleurodiscus oakesii

Oct 11, 2023 Field Characteristics:

  • Growing locally abundant on American Hophornbeam tree in mixed oak/hickory woodland
  • Sporocarps disc-shaped, slightly concaved, and light tan with a lighter ( almost white) margin.
  • Spore Print: white
Yellow American Blusher
Yellow American Blusher
Yellow American Blusher

Yellow American Blusher

Amanita flavorubens

Form

Form2

July 18th, 2023 Field Characteristics:

  • Growing gregariously in well-shaded, mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Black Oak, Northern Red Oak, Black Cherry, Chinkapin Oak, and distant Bur Oak.
  • Cap yellow with yellowish-brown central portions, adorned with removable yellow universal veil remnants. Margin finely lined.
  • Stipe light yellow with prominent annulus, becoming more yellow and scaly towards the base. Volva consists of multiple yellow squarrose rings on a bulbous base.
  • Basal mycelium white.
  • Slight red blushing on vovla.
  • Smell: Not distinctive
  • Taste: Not distinctive
  • KOH: Negative
  • Ammonia: Negative

Observation

Yellow Patches
Yellow Patches
Yellow Patches

Yellow Patches

Amanita flavoconia-03

This mushroom has not been formally described in North America yet and has the provisional name Amanita "flavoconia-03".

July 14th, 2023 Field Characteristics:

Growing on an open east-facing mixed oak/hickory woodland slope near Shagbark Hickory, Bur Oak, ash, Northern Red Oak, and Chinkapin Oak trees.

Long Wedge Ringless Amanita
Long Wedge Ringless Amanita
Long Wedge Ringless Amanita

Long Wedge Ringless Amanita

Amanita longicuneus

The Long Wedge Ringless Amanita is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in the spring through summer. It is suspected to associate with a range of deciduous trees (especally Oak) and possibly conifers on occasion. It seems to be widespread in Eastern North America.

The cap is colored brownish with a darker center. The cap has a lined pattern (striations) from the margin to about halfway to the center of the cap. The gills are free from the stem to narrowly attached (acutely adnexed). The stem has no ring (annulus), and has a unique cup (volva).

Gills

The main distinguishing characteristic is what is called an "internal limb" (limbus internus) on its volva. From R. E. Tulloss:

"The distinguishing character of this species (within its known range) is the form of the internal limb of the volva. When the fruiting body is cut in half lengthwise, the volval sac is seen to have two limbs. The outer limb covered the entire mushroom during its early development. The inner limb (which also completely encircles the stem), was between the stem and what became the free edges of the gills during development. In this species, the shape of the cross-sectioned inner limb is that of a very long and narrow wedge." (Tulloss, 2024)

North American mycology has been working on classifying this mushroom for some time now, and it has also had the provisional names "Amanita sp. 28", "Amanita sp-GSM05", and "A. sp-longicuneus01" in recent years. Amanita longicuneus is still a provisional name as the time of this writing and we will most likely see a publication legitimizing it in future years.

June 15th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing from moss-covered compacted soil (trail) in open mixed oak woodland near Northern Red Oak, Bur Oak, Chinkapin Oak, and Elm trees.

  • 6cm tall
  • 1.5 cm wide cap
  • Brown darkest at central portion of cap, fading to a lighter brown towards the margin.
  • Specimen reoriented its cap while in the carrying case after being picked. Gravitropism?

Gravitropism

White Panther
White Panther
White Panther

White Panther

Amanita multisquamosa-01

This is a presumed toxic, mycorrhizal mushroom growing on soil in the spring through fall. It can be found associated with Oak and other broadleaf trees east of the Great Plains.

It is mostly white, with a yellow or tan cap center. The cap is adorned with white, removable warts.

Cap surface

The gill attachment is free to nearly attached (acutely adnexed), and the gill spacing is crowded.

Gills

This species usually provides a skirt of tissue on the stem (annulus), but the skirt has either been eaten by bugs or removed by other means in this specimen. Note how difficult it can be to identify Amanitas because of clues (like the annulus) getting lost through time!

It has a bulbous base with a collar-like cup (volva) and sometimes transient velar tissue extending further up the stem (pictured).

Volva

This mushroom has the provisional name Amanita "multisquamosa-01" until it can be formally described.

July 12th, 2023 Field Characteristics

  • Growing solitarily in open mixed oak/hickory woodland.
  • Nearby Trees: Eastern Red Cedar, American Hophornbeam, Northern Red Oak, Ash, American Linden, and Shagbark Hickory.
  • Cap adorned with removable warts.
  • Lammellae serrated.
  • No annulus present (potentially removed).
  • Volva with concentric scaly rings.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: not distinctive.
  • KOH: negative on cap.
Great Felt Skirt Destroying Angel
Great Felt Skirt Destroying Angel
Great Felt Skirt Destroying Angel

Great Felt Skirt Destroying Angel

Amanita magnivelaris

This is a deadly poisonous mushroom. Please see Deadly Mushrooms of Nebraska by C. Brueggemann where it is treated as Amanita bisporigera.

The Great Felt Skirt Destroying Angel is a mycorrhizal mushroom that grows in soil in wooded habitats in the summer. It is white, has a membranous skirt on the stem, and has a bulbous base with a volva.

July 17th, 2023 Field Characteristics

  • Growing solitarily on open mixed oak/hickory woodland ridge.
  • Nearby Trees: Bitternut Hickory, Ash, American Hophornbeam, Black Oak, and distant Chinkapin Oak.
  • All portions are white.
  • Cap bald, slightly tacky.
  • Lamellae free from stipe.
  • Stipe with prominent annulus 1/4 down the stem and a large bulbous, sack-like volva at the base.
  • Smell: Not distinctive.
  • Taste: Not distinctive.
  • KOH: Negative on cap (atypical of species) and slightly darkening stipe.
  • Microscopy: basidia appear to have 2 sterigmata.
Murrill's Slender Caesar
Murrill's Slender Caesar
Murrill's Slender Caesar

Murrill's Slender Caesar

Amanita murrilliana

This is a mycorrhizal mushroom that grows in soil and can be found in the summer and fall east of the Rocky Mountains. It has a ring (annulus) on the upper side of the stem and a sack-like cup (volva) at the base. It can be found associating with Oak and other broadleaf trees.

Measurements

July 26th, 2023 Field Characteristics:

  • Growing solitarily in a lawn near mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Bur Oak, Elm, distant Black Walnut and Ash.
  • Cap light tan, becoming slightly darker towards the center, with a lined margin. No evidence of universal veil remnants on pileipellis.
  • Stipe with prominent partial veil, slightly peeling in places (more prevalent near volva), hollow or with central pith.
  • Volva sack-like and delicate, not appearing to be swollen.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: not distinctive.
  • KOH: pale orange on pileipellis and stipe.

Annulus

Amanita sp-NE01
Amanita sp-NE01
Amanita sp-NE01

Amanita sp-NE01

Amanita sp-NE01 is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in the spring to summer. It can be found in Oak/Hickory forests. Not much is known about this mushroom because it is recently new to science in 2024 DNA studies. This group of mushrooms (the Amanitas) should not be collected for the table by beginner mushroom hunters as there are deadly poisonous members of the group. See a list of poisonous Amanitas known to Nebraska here.

The cap is colored light tan. The pattern on the cap are lines (striations) that go from the cap margin to 1/2 to the center of the cap. The gills are free from the stem to narrowly attached to it (acutely adnexed). The stem does not have a ring (annulus) and it has a cup at the base (volva). The volva looks like a sheath or a loose membranous sock on the base of the stem.

Volva

June 14th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing from moss pad on open east-facing mixed oak/hickory woodland slope.

  • Nearby trees: Northern Red Oak, Shagbark Hickory, Ash, and Bur Oak.
  • Taste mild to nutty; pleasant.
  • Sheathing volva.
  • No annulus present.

Observation

Garlic-Odored Death Cap
Garlic-Odored Death Cap
Garlic-Odored Death Cap

Garlic-Odored Death Cap

Amanita suballiacea

The Garlic-Odored Death Cap is a white to cream spore-colored mycorrhizal mushroom that associates mostly with Oak and Pine trees east of the Rocky Mountains. This species is considered deadly poisoinous.

It has free, white gills. The stem has a ring (annulus) near the top and a sack-like cup (volva) at the base.

Gills

August 3rd, 2023 Field Notes:

  • Growing solitarily on open mixed oak/hickory woodland ridge.
  • Nearby Trees: American Hophornbeam, Black Oak, June Berry, Ash, Bur Oak, and Shagbark Hickory.
  • Cap large (14-15cm), white, slightly tacky with a faintly striated margin.
  • Lamellae white, crowded with frequent short gills, slightly serrated and not attached to the stipe.
  • Stipe white, with prominent annulus and enlarged white sack-like volva at the base, hollow or with central pith, and with upward recurved fibers most prominent midway up.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: faintly bitter sensation, but more or less not distinctive.
  • KOH: lightly yellow on pileipellis and yellowish on stipe.
  • Spore Print: white
  • Microscopy: basidia with 4 sterigmata.

Form

Yellow Honey Mushroom
Yellow Honey Mushroom
Yellow Honey Mushroom

Yellow Honey Mushroom

Armillaria mellea

The Yellow Honey Mushroom (Armillaria mellea) is a decomposer and tree parasite that can be found growing in large clusters in wooded areas at the base of trees and fallen logs in the fall. It is widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere.

This mushroom grows in large clusters at the base of trees and fallen wood. The cap shape is evenly rounded becoming flat with age. The cap is ornamented with brownish scales that are especially abundant towards the center. The scales can wear off with age.

Cluster

The gill color is whitish. The gills are attached to the stem usually with a small tooth running down the stem.

Basal view

The stem color starts out a golden yellowish when young generally turning whitish or brownish with age. There is a membranous ring (annulus) on the stem. The shape of the base of the stem is usually pointed due to the mushrooms growing in clusters. The spore print is white.

Form

In addition to the mushroom, Armillaria mellea grows a network black rope-like structures of mycelium (rhizomorphs) that spread through the forest and are parasitic on trees.

September 19th, 2022 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing at the base of dead northern red oak tree on open oak woodland ridge.

Observation

October 11, 2023 Field Characteristics:

  • Primordial specimens growing at the base of hardwood tree in mixed oak/hickory woodland.
  • Caps round, firm with yellow scaber-like structures on pileipellis.
  • Stipes yellow and firm.

Observation

Crown-tipped Coral Fungus
Crown-tipped Coral Fungus
Crown-tipped Coral Fungus

Crown-tipped Coral Fungus

Artomyces pyxidatus

May 17, 2023 Field Characteristics:

Growing on the logs of a large hardwood tree in a large moist oak/hickory woodland draw.

Earpick Fungus
Earpick Fungus
Earpick Fungus

Earpick Fungus

Auriscalpium vulgare

The Earpick Fungus (Auriscalpium vulgare) is distinctive mushroom can be found growing alone or in small groups on buried pine cones and in the spring, fall, and winter. It is widely distributed throughout North America. It is brownish-red, distinctively kidney-shaped from the top, with a stem attached to the side of the cap, and with white spines underneath. The spore print is white

June 18th, 2024 Field Notes - Niobrara Valley Preserve:

  • Growing on Ponderosa pine cone on the upper slope of spring-branch canyon.

Observation

White Honey Mushroom
White Honey Mushroom
White Honey Mushroom

White Honey Mushroom

Armillaria gallica

The White Honey Mushroom (Armillaria gallica) is a decomposer of wood and can be found in the fall. It has a widespread distribution in Eastern Nebraska from Indian Cave State Park to the Niobrara Valley Preserve (Mee-Sook & Klopfenstein, 2011). A. gallica can be found in areas of dead trees decomposing wood and buried roots and is common in wooded areas and occasional lawns (decomposing tree roots).

The cap is ornamented with distinct scaly hairs that are more abundant toward the center of the stem as the mushroom matures.

Apical View Cap

The gill color is whitish. The gills are attached to the stem and sometimes have a short bit that runs down the stem (decurrent tooth).

Gills

This species has a high degree of color variation. The specimen below has a whiter base color with darker cap scales than the one above.

Apical View Form

Fruiting bodies grow alone or in small clusters. The stem shape has an enlarged base (bulbous). It has a ring (annulus) that is cobwebby to membranous in composition. It does not have a cup at the base (volva). The spore print is white.

Basal View Form

October 24th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

468

Observed At: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 10:31 AM Created At: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 10:31 AM Last Modified At: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 11:07 AM locations: 40.254601173049124 -95.55665001723096 Form Group: Smell: pencil eraser Form Group: agaric Substrate: Substrate: terrestrial, lignicolous Growth Habit: Growth Habit: gregarious Habitat: Habitat: ( Growth Habit: gregarious, Substrate: terrestrial, lignicolous, Associated Trees: ( Carya cordiformis ) ) Associated Trees: Associated Trees: ( Carya cordiformis ) Cap: Pileus: ( Shape: ( Top view: orbicular; Profile: convex to plane to umbo to broadly umbonate ); Surface: ( texture: squamose [1]; moisture: dry-silky; color: cinnamon to pinkish buff to buff to curry-yellow to clay-pink to peach to salmon to flesh-pink [2]; koh color: brownish red [3] ) ) Shape: Shape: ( Top view: orbicular; Profile: convex to plane to umbo to broadly umbonate ) Surface: Surface: ( texture: squamose [4]; moisture: dry-silky; color: cinnamon to pinkish buff to buff to curry-yellow to clay-pink to peach to salmon to flesh-pink [5]; koh color: brownish red [6] ) Gills: Lamellae: ( Attachment: uncinate to adnate [7] ) Stem: Stipe: ( shape: clavate to terete to compressed; surface: fibrous; flexibility: firm; interior: solid to stuffed with pith ) Annulus: Annulus: ( Shape: subperonate ) Footnotes: [1] White to brown scales [2] Curry yellow bruising at the base [3] Turning reddish brown at yellow stem base [4] White to brown scales [5] Curry yellow bruising at the base [6] Turning reddish brown at yellow stem base [7] Sinuate

Spore Print: white

Observation 1

Field Characteristics:

480

Observed At: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 2:50 PM Created At: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 2:49 PM Last Modified At: Tuesday, October 24, 2023 2:54 PM locations: 40.260730859128394 -95.55750996386556 Form Group: Form Group: agaric Substrate: Substrate: terrestrial Growth Habit: Growth Habit: connate Habitat: In low draw adjacent to creek in oak hickory woodland Cap: Pileus: ( Shape: ( Top view: orbicular; Profile: plane to broadly convex to convex ) ) Shape: Shape: ( Top view: orbicular; Profile: plane to broadly convex to convex ) Stem: Stipe: ( interior: stuffed with pith [1] ) Annulus: Annulus: ( Texture: membranous to fibrillose ) Footnotes: [1] Inner pith as cottony threads.

Observation 1

American Tree Ear
American Tree Ear

American Tree Ear

Auricularia americana

The American Tree Ear is a decomposer of dead broadleaf wood and can be found in the spring through fall. It is a common mushroom that is widely distributed in North America (and possibly further).

The fruiting body takes the form a jelly-like structure. The shape is "ear"-shaped, fan-shaped, cup-shaped, and variations in-between. The color is brownish to reddish-brown becoming darker colors as it dries out. The spore print is white.

A good time to search for this mushroom are after a period of consistent, heavy rains.

May 16th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing on fallen Shagbark Hickory limb in large oak/hickory woodland draw.

  • Exidia glandulosa growing in close proximity on the same substrate.

Observation

Smoky Polypore
Smoky Polypore
Smoky Polypore

Smoky Polypore

Bjerkandera adusta

The Smoky Polypore can be distinguished by its gray-to-black pore surface in contrast to its pale cap surface. It is widespread across the continent and can be found year-round. It grows in large, shelving clusters on wood that stack on top of each other at the same time growing as a crust (effused-reflexed). The specimens pictured here are relatively young.

Measurements

October 24, 2023 Field Notes

  • Effused-reflexed.
  • Nonfertile surface white to buff yellow.
  • Hymenophore grayish. Smell strong and pleasant. “Bringing fond memories of from the pool as a kid”-Chance “It’s not the chlorine, it’s the fresh, “watery” smell”

Form

Ash-tree Bolete
Ash-tree Bolete
Ash-tree Bolete

Ash-tree Bolete

Boletinellus merulioides

Field Characteristics:

#171

-Growing gregariously from soil in open mixed oak woodland with a few Ash trees in close proximity.

-Hymenium and inner flesh instantly bruising blue, later fading back close to original color.

-Younger caps with tomentose pileipellis while older specimens matte to shiny.

-Taste: earthy, similar to dirt. Smell: not distinctive.

Atkinson's Bolete
Atkinson's Bolete
Atkinson's Bolete

Atkinson's Bolete

Boletus atkinsonii

The Atkinson's Bolete is a soft, fleshy mushroom with a separatable pore surface on the underside of its cap. The cap top surface is brownish and the flesh of the cap is white. The pore surface begins white color and later becomes yellow. It has a net-like pattern on its stem, which is indicative of the genus Boletus. It is associated with broadleaf trees east of the Rocky Mountains. Interestingly, it has a pinkish-to-purpleish reaction when ammonia is applied to the cap surface.

Ammonia

June 14th, 2023 Field Notes

Growing gregariously from soil on open oak/hickory woodland ridge near American Hophornbeam, Chinkapin oak, Black Oak, and ash. Ammonia flashes pinkish instantly around the area of contact. Portions of the cap (margin) and stipe slowly staining pinkish when handled. White pore surface, tan-brown cap.

Pores

August 2019 Field Notes

Found growing amongst red oak, chinkapin oak and ironwood trees.

Short and stout boletes with cream-white pore surface and prominent reticulation down the thick stem. Flesh unchanging when cut/bruised. Ammonia on the cap resulted in a spreading pink reaction.

Context

Berkeley's Polypore
Berkeley's Polypore
Berkeley's Polypore

Berkeley's Polypore

Bondarzewia berkeleyi

Hymeniphore

Field Characteristics:

  • Growing as rosette at the base of large Northern Red Oak in low mixed oak/hickory woodland slope, just above riparian area.
  • Large fruiting body consisting of broad overlapping fronds, tan in the middle and whitish near the margins.
  • Hymenium consisting of white irregular/angular (some maze-like) pores, becoming faint near areas of fresh growth.
  • Smell: fragrant like banana or pawpaw fruit.
  • Taste: not distinctive.
  • Spore Print: white
Club-like Tuning Fork
Club-like Tuning Fork
Club-like Tuning Fork

Club-like Tuning Fork

Calocera cornea

The Club-like Tuning Fork is a decomposer that grows on wood. This specimen was found fruiting in the cracks of a chared Black Oak trunk. It is yellow to orange-colored and is tough and gelatinous (the same features are shared with many other Dacrymycetes). It can be found fruiting on Oaks and other broadleaf woods in the spring and fall.

Calocera furcata is similar, but fruits on conifer wood.

Form

August 3rd, 2023 Field Notes

  • Growing in large numbers from lateral cracks on a charred Black Oak trunk in open mixed oak woodland.
  • Fruiting bodies are orange, gelatinous but fairly tough, spire-like with a fork near the tip.
  • Smell: not distinctive
  • Taste: not distinctive
Chicago Chanterelle
Chicago Chanterelle
Chicago Chanterelle

Chicago Chanterelle

Cantharellus chicagoensis

The Chicago Chanterelle (Cantharellus chicagoensis) is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in Oak-dominated forests (though possibly associating with other broadleaf trees). It can be found across north central North America from July - September. This mushroom was once grouped into a different species called the Golden Chanterelle (Cantharellus cibarius) until DNA testing distinguished it to be a separate species (Leacock, et al., 2016).

Form

The cap, fertile surface (hymenium), and stem are all yellow, though often greenish-yellow hues can be present when immature. This mushroom is not composed of true gills. Instead, the spore producing surface is constructed by wavy, forking ridges that run down the stem (decurrent). These ridges aren't easily separable from the mushroom which would be more typical of true "gills".

Hymenium

The Chicago Chanterelle grows from the soil and associates with Oak and other hardwoods. The featured specimen was found growing amidst a population of Chinkapin Oak, Elm, Northern Red Oak, Black Walnut, and Bur Oak. The smell and taste are faint to unnoticeable.

July 6th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously (some fused) in mixed oak/hickory woodland.

Associated trees: Chinkapin oak, Elm, Northern Red Oak, Black Walnut, and Bur Oak.

  • Smell: faintly floral
  • Taste: not distinctive.

DNA Barcode ITS: GAACGCAAACGGCACCCTTCCAGTCCATTCCAAAGCGGTGGCGGAGGATGAAGACAAGGGTATCTCTGGCTGAGGGTAATGTAAACTGATCCGGTCGTACCACTGGTTGACTGGGGATTGGGCTCGCTTGGAGCGATATCGCTCTGGCTTGCCTTAAAATCAAGCGTTGTGTGGATTGGACTTTCAAGCGTGCATTGGGGACGCAGGCTCTGCGCTATATGGCAAGCCCTTGACCGTCATAGGTGCTTTGATTGGGGTCTTCAGTCTAGCCAACAAGGCTGGGTTGGACTTTGGGGCTGCATTGGGGGCGTAGGGCAGCTCTGTTCGTGGCGTCCGATGACCGTCATGGTGCATGATTGGACTTCAACTAGCAATTATTATCATTATCATTACTATGGGTTTACCTCAGGTCAGAGAAGACTACCCGCTGGACTTAA

Observation

Mossy Maze Polypore
Mossy Maze Polypore
Mossy Maze Polypore

Mossy Maze Polypore

Cerrena unicolor

Field Characteristics:

482

Nickname: Cerena unicolor
Sequence Number: #0482
Observed At: Thursday, October 26, 2023 10:11 AM
Location: 40.26033670408027, -95.56689605061773

Form Group: Polypore [1]

Habitat:
  • Growth Habit: Single
  • Substrate: Lignicolous
  • Tree: [2]

Attachment: Sessile

Pileus:
  • Surface:
    • Texture: Hirsute

[1] Smell pleasant

[2] Growing from the base of Elm

Collybiopsis biformis
Collybiopsis biformis
Collybiopsis biformis

Collybiopsis biformis

Collybiopsis biformis is small a decomposer that can be found growing on leaf/forest duff and dead wood east of the Rocky Mountains from summer through fall.

June 29th, 2023 Field Notes

  • Growing solo on Northern Red Oak acorn shell in low mixed oak/hickory woodland.
  • Compare to Gymnopus. Clitocyboid. Gills close and decurrent. Line margin. Hairy mycelium at the base of the stipe shortening in length to absent at the cap intersection. Depressed cap. Cap surface smooth with radial streaking. Growing from Northern red oak acorn shell.
  • Smell: faint.
  • Taste: slightly bitter.
  • KOH: olive on pileipellis.
Coltricia sp-IN01
Coltricia sp-IN01
Coltricia sp-IN01

Coltricia sp-IN01

Coltricia species can be found in forested soil along woodland trails during the summer. The species collected for this study is an undescribed North American species going under the cryptic name Coltricia sp-IN01. It has a circular shape in outline (from the top down) and is navel-shaped, sunken in the center, or somewhat funnel shaped. The flesh is quite thin and flexible. The pore-shaped to tooth-shaped reproductive surface on the bottom of the cap provide a unique distinguishing feature along with its central stem and terrestrial habit.

Stay tuned for more details once it gets described.

Form

August 15th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously from soil in open mixed oak/hickory woodland.

Nearby Trees: American Hophornbeam, Northern Red Oak, Bitternut Hickory, Bur Oak, Shagbark Hickory, and Black Walnut.

  • Caps orange, fibrous, iridescent with concentric light bands, with a slight central depression and a fringed margin.
  • Hymenium consisting of dark brown, irregular-shaped pores and a darker sterile margin.
  • Stipe dark brown, subtomentose and tapering to a slightly bulbus base.

Additional Info

  • Smell: not distinctive
  • Taste: not distinctive
  • KOH instantly black on all surfaces but stipe which turned a darker shade of brown.

Observation1

August 16th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously on soil in open (but well shaded) mixed oak/hickory woodland. North-facing slope.

  • Pileipellis: iridescent, hirsute at center, enrolled margin which is violet
  • Hyminum: irregular pores with diff growing through; bruising dark red
  • Stipe: subtomentose.
  • Smell: strong

Observation2

Cotylidia diaphana
Cotylidia diaphana
Cotylidia diaphana

Cotylidia diaphana

Field Characteristics:

  • Growing gregariously on woodland floor in open mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Flesh thin and fairly tough.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: mildly bitter.
Fan-shaped Jelly Fungus
Fan-shaped Jelly Fungus
Fan-shaped Jelly Fungus

Fan-shaped Jelly Fungus

Dacrymyces spathularia

Field Characteristics:

#218

-Growing in troops (locally abundant) on charred portion of fallen oak tree in open mixed oak/hickory woodland.

Smell: Not distinctive Taste: Bitter

Dacryopinax elegans
Dacryopinax elegans
Dacryopinax elegans

Dacryopinax elegans

Field Characteristics:

489

Nickname: Dacrypinax elegans
Sequence Number: #0489
Observed At: Thursday, October 26, 2023 1:48 PM
Location: 40.245803401857664, -95.53598855134709

Form Group: Dacrymycetales

Habitat:
  • Growth Habit: Gregarious
  • Substrate: Lignicolous
  • Tree: Desciduous
Spores:
  • Print color: [1]

[1] Light yellow

Dirty Bolete
Dirty Bolete
Dirty Bolete

Dirty Bolete

Cyanoboletus cyaneitinctus

The Dirty Bolete (Cyanoboletus cyaneitinctus) is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found growing in woodland soil and lawns adjacent to Oaks and other symbiotic trees in Eastern North America. It can be found in the summer and fall growing singularly or (rarely) in small groups.

The cap shape is cushion-shaped to evenly rounded. The cap color is different hues of brown or maroon. The cap texture is finely powdery when young, turning smooth with age. When wet, it can be slightly tacky, with leaves or other debris commonly adhering to the surface as it dries. It bruises blue quickly and readily when handled.

Cap

The fertile surface under the cap is composed of yellow, circular to angular pores that also bruise blue where handled.

Hymenophore

The stem is yellow commonly transitioning to a reddish color towards the base.

The inner flesh (context) of the mushroom is generally a similar color to the stem, which readily bruise blue when cut.

When cut

Though considered to be edible in the past, it has been determined to be a bio-accumultor of arsenic from the soil (Pavelle, 2015), which makes its edibility iffy.

July 26th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing scattered in low East-facing mixed oak/hickory woodland.

  • Cap brownish-tan with some maroon hues and velvety, bruising darker.
  • Pore surface dingy yellow with irregular shaped pores that quickly turn dark blue when bruised.
  • Stipe yellow at apex, quickly turning reddish brown clear to the base, also bruising dark blue.
  • Basal mycelium white.
  • Interior flesh yellowish, quickly turning dark blue where cut.

Additional Info

  • Taste: acidic to mild
  • Smell: not distinctive to reminiscent of Portabellas.
  • KOH: orangish on pileipellis, dark buff-orange on pore surface.
  • Ammonia darkening on pileipellis, pore surface, and stipe.

DNA ITS Barcode: GAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTCGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATCGAATTCTCAACCATGCCCCTTTGTCAAAAGGACATGGCTTGGACTTTGGGAGCCTTGCTGGCCTTTTTGGTCAGCTCTCCTGAAATGCATTAGCGATGGGTGGGCAAGTCTTCATTAGAGACGTGCACGGCCTTCGACGTGATAATGATCGTCGTGGCTGGAGCGTCTTTATTCTTGCGATCCGTCCTCGCTCACAATCTCTGCTAGCCTTGGGTTAGCTTTTGGCTATTAGTTCGGTCACGAGACCTGACGAACGTCAGAGGTGCACCCCCAAGGACTGGTCGATTTCGAAACTTGACCTCAAATCAGGTAGGATTACCCGCTGAACTTAA

Observation

American Amber Jelly Fungus
American Amber Jelly Fungus
American Amber Jelly Fungus

American Amber Jelly Fungus

Exidia crenata

The American Amber Jelly Fungus (Exidia crenata) is a decomposer of dead wood and can be found in the spring and fall. It is widespread east of the Rocky Mountains in North America.

The color is dark maroon to black. The consistency is elastic and jelly-like. It has a habit of growing in clusters. The spore print is white.

October 26th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Parks

Spore Print: white

Observation

White Jelly Fungus
White Jelly Fungus
White Jelly Fungus

White Jelly Fungus

Ductifera pululahuana

Field Characteristics:

39

Growing on fallen barkless hardwood log in moist oak/hickory woodland.

Velvet Foot
Velvet Foot
Velvet Foot

Velvet Foot

Flammulina velutipes

Field Characteristics:

491

Nickname: Flammulina nigrapes
Sequence Number: #0491
Observed At: Thursday, October 26, 2023 2:34 PM
Location: 40.245976872668614, -95.53594591526966

Form Group: Agaric

Habitat:
  • Growth Habit: Connate to Single to Gregarious
  • Substrate: Lignicolous
  • Tree: Desciduous
Spores:
  • Print color: white
Mustard Yellow Polypore
Mustard Yellow Polypore
Mustard Yellow Polypore

Mustard Yellow Polypore

Fuscoporia gilva

The Mustard Yellow Polypore (Fuscoporia gilva) is a common decomposer of broadleaf wood that can be found year-round, but shows its most vivid colors during wet periods in the summer when it is actively growing. It is widely distributed in North America.

The cap surface color is reddish to yellow-mustard when young, becoming darker, then black with age. The fertile structure (hymenopore) color is similar or darker. The hymenopore consists of tiny pores.

Hymenophore

This mushroom is easy to distinguish using drops KOH (black) and ammonia (darkening).

Chemical Apical View

Chemical Basal View

The inner flesh (context) is a yellow-mustard color and can be sometimes observed even when the mushroom is old and has turned black with age.

Context

September 7th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Shelving gregariously on fallen Ash tree in open interface between riparian and mixed oak/hickory woodland areas.

  • Caps thin with concentric zonation, brown with an orange-brown margin.
  • Hymenophore finely poroid, primarily brown and orange-brown near margin.

Additional Info

  • KOH blackish on all surfaces.
  • Ammonia dark on all surfaces.

Observation

Earthstars
Earthstars
Earthstars

Earthstars

Geastrum sp.

Apex

June 19th, 2024 Field Notes - NVR:

24-1458

Peduncle present

Observation

Collared Earthstar
Collared Earthstar
Collared Earthstar

Collared Earthstar

Geastrum triplex

The Collared Earthstar (Geastrum triplex) is a decomposer that can be found growing alone or in groups under broadleaf trees in the summer and fall. It is widely distributed in North America and can be found in forest, urban, or suburban settings.

This mushroom produces spores enclosed within an egg-shaped case (sequestrate) fruiting body. It creates a star shape from an outer casing that splits radially and curls backwards to elevate the inner "egg" off the ground. This species creates a distinct "beak" at the top (apex) made of tiny threads that create a one-way passage for spore dispersal. The spores are brownish.

This mushroom utilizes disturbances in nature like rain drops as force to eject spores into wind currents to inoculate other areas. It is a fascinating example of nature using passive systems as a part of its lifecycle and function in the ecosystem.

In situ

September 1st, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing gregariously from soil next to hardwood pile in low riparian woodland area.

  • Smell: faint to not distinct.
  • Taste: bitter
  • Brown spores

Observation

Ganoderma sessile
Ganoderma sessile
Ganoderma sessile

Ganoderma sessile

Field Characteristics:

#462

-Growing in overlapping shelves on the trunk of dead American Sycamore tree in open horse pasture.

  • Caps red, semicircular, lacquered, wrinkled with radial zonation.
  • Hymenium brownish with tiny circular/round pores.
  • Stipe absent.

Additional Details

  • KOH black on non lacquered areas.
  • Spore deposits on cap brown.
Bicoloured Bracket
Bicoloured Bracket
Bicoloured Bracket

Bicoloured Bracket

Gloeoporus dichrous

Field Characteristics:

#459

-Growing in shelves and resupinately on hardwood branch in mixed oak/hickory woodland.

  • Caps round, flat and white.
  • Hymenium whitish sterile surfaces and with brown round pores.
  • Stipe absent

Additional Details

  • Spore Print: white
Hen Of The Woods
Hen Of The Woods
Hen Of The Woods

Hen Of The Woods

Grifola frondosa

Field Characteristics:

#413

-Growing at the base of large Northern Red Oak tree in mixed oak/hickory woodland just above creek.

  • Cap consisting of an irregular rosette pattern of overlapping brownish-gray fronds, all fused at base. The colors are more pronounced on along the margins of each frond.
  • Hymenium white consisting of a network of small irregular shaped pores.
  • Stipe absent

Additional Details -Spore Print: white

Oak-Loving Gymnopus
Oak-Loving Gymnopus
Oak-Loving Gymnopus

Oak-Loving Gymnopus

Gymnopus dryophilus

The Oak-Loving Gymnopus can be found fruiting on sticks, twigs, and woodland duff and has a worldwide range. It can be found in spring, summer, and fall and is extremely common in wooded habitats.

Gymnopus dryophilus has a chestnut colored cap that is evenly rounded to flat. The gills are white, shallow, crowded, and are attached to the stem. It has a white spore print. The stem base is generally wider than the apex.

June 29th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing scattered on oak woodland duff in small mixed oak/hickory woodland draw.
  • Gills very shallow. Stipe somewhat elastic.
  • KOH: slightly darkening pileipellis
  • Taste: not distinctive.
Zoned Gymnopus
Zoned Gymnopus
Zoned Gymnopus

Zoned Gymnopus

Gymnopus earleae-OH01

The Zoned Gymnopus is a widely distributed gilled mushroom that can be found in the springtime in soil and well decomposed wood.

It's closely related to the Oak-Loving Gymnopus, and can be separated by a few field characteristics:

  • Its growth habit on soil or wood rather than leaf litter.
  • Yellow gills rather than white.
  • Occasonal color zonation on the cap (as compared to solid chestnut color in the Oak-Loving Gymnopus).
  • Reddish rhyzomorphs rather than white.

July 12th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregariously in moss in open mixed oak woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: American Hophornbeam, Black Oak, Northern Red Oak, Chinkapin Oak and distant Black Cherry.
  • Cap hygrophanous with slight rosecomb mutation on the center and light margin.
  • Gills pale orange, short gills frequent, and notched with a decurrent tooth on stipe.
  • Smell: rubbery
  • KOH: darkening all surfaces.
Hairy-Stalked Gymnopus
Hairy-Stalked Gymnopus
Hairy-Stalked Gymnopus

Hairy-Stalked Gymnopus

Gymnopus spongiosus

The Hairy-Stalked Gymnopus is a decomposer of woodland duff that can be found from late summer through fall. It can be found east of the Rocky Mountains in woodland areas. As is true with many other species of Gymnopus, this species has an elastic consistency throughout, has shallow gills with occasional cross veins (see below), and grows on woodland duff.

Gills

The main distinctive characteristic of G. spongiosus is the dense reddish-brown hairs on the stem from the base extending to the apex.

Stem

August 18th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing individually on well-decayed hardwood log in deep, wet mixed oak/hickory woodland draw.
  • Gills adnexed to free.
  • Stipe very hirsute near base.
  • Smell: reminiscent of chocolate.

September 12th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing scattered on woodland duff in mixed oak woodland edge.
  • Caps light brown with a darker center.
  • Lamellae adnexed, light tan, forking or with crossveins.
  • Stipe colored similarly to lamellae at apex, transitioning to a reddish brown base covered in light brown wooly mycelium.
Beard Stem Gymnopus
Beard Stem Gymnopus
Beard Stem Gymnopus

Beard Stem Gymnopus

Gymnopus barbipes

Gymnopus barbipes is a gilled mushroom that can be found in the summer and fall decomposing deciduous duff and leaf litter.

The stem is distinctively flattnened, hollow, and the basal mycelium binds to its substrate with white rhizomorphs. This mushroom gets its name from the felty white mycelium at the base of the stem (not shown).

Stem

The gills are white and shallow. They are attached to the stem or pulling away from it from drying.

Gills

The entire fruiting body is elastic and tough, which is distinctive of other Gymnopus as well.

Gills

July 7th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing solitarily on woodland duff in low riparian woodland area near creek.
  • Flat stipe with a red-tan color. Cap surface centrally brown turning white towards margin. Gills close.
  • Smell: foul rubber smell.
  • Taste: reminiscent of garlic. Long-lasting.
  • KOH: slightly olive-gray on pileipellis; Slightly darkening on gills; indistinct on stipe.
  • Microscopy: Dextrinoid in Melzer's Reagent.

August 16th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregariously on Eastern Red Cedar and oak leaf litter on the edge of thin mixed oak woodland.
  • Caps with soft pileipellis (mildy subtomentose).
  • Gills marginate (white edges with light tan faces), frequent partial gills, not attached to stipe.
  • Stipe tan with a white fuzz that matts down when handled, and hollow.
  • Basal mycelium white, clinging to nearby duff.
  • Smell: foul, like smelly rubber boots.
  • Taste: also foul, enough to make breath smell.
Chestnut Bolete
Chestnut Bolete
Chestnut Bolete

Chestnut Bolete

Gyroporus castaneus-IN07

The Chestnut Bolete (Gyroporus castaneus) is a mycorrhizal (and reportably saprobic) bolete that can be found in woodland soil and disturbed areas. Although boletes generally associate with a mycorrhizal host tree, this mushrooms has reportably been found in areas without a visible mycorrhizal symbiont. Otherwise, it has been associated with Oaks, other broadleaf trees, and conifers. It can be found growing alone or in small groups in July, August, and September in eastern North America.

2024 DNA results identified the survey specimen as Gyroporus "castaneus-IN07" suggesting it to be a genetically divergent species to Gyroporus castaneus in the strict sense. This cryptic name is a placeholder until it can be published formally.

The cap shape is evenly rounded, becoming flat with age. The flesh consistency is hard and brittle. It often splits at the margin at maturity. The cap texture is smooth to slightly velvety. The cap color features chestnut brown, yellowish brown, cinnamon brown to brownish orange.

Cap

chestnut
#79443B
chestnut-brown
#79443B
chestnut-brown
#674C47
chestnut
#635147
golden chestnut
#6F4E37
Strong Yellowish Brown
#996515
Deep Yellowish Brown
#654522
Light Yellowish Brown
#C19A6B
Brownish Orange
#AE6938
cinnamon
#A67B5B
cinnamon
#BE8A3D
cinnamon-brown
#6F4E37
cinnamon
#C19A6B
cinnamon brown
#826644

The pore shape is circular to slightly angular. It is colored white to cream and doesn't bruise when handled:

Pores

White
#F2F3F4
milk white
#F0EAD6
cream
#F3E5AB
cream color
#F8DE7E

The stem is brittle and becomes cottony hollow with age. It is colored similarly to the cap (concolorous), though sometimes paler.

Stem

Generally regarded as edible (Pavelle, 2025).

Sunray Sawtooth
Sunray Sawtooth
Sunray Sawtooth

Sunray Sawtooth

Heliocybe sulcata

The Sunray Sawtooth (Heliocybe sulcata) is a widely distributed decomposer of wood (especially quaking aspen) that can be found from April to September.

The cap is distinctively pleated, with reddish scales in the center that form ridges on the top of the pleats toward the margin.

Cap

The gills are white, serrated, and are attached to the stem or pulling away from it. It's not uncommon to find two caps fused at together towards the base of the stem.

Hymenophore

The spore print is whitish.

Spore print

June 16th, 2024 Field Notes - Niobrara Valley Preserve

Spore Print: whitish

Observation

Coral Tooth Fungus
Coral Tooth Fungus
Coral Tooth Fungus

Coral Tooth Fungus

Hericium coralloides

The Coral Tooth Fungus functions as a parasite of living trees and a decomposer of deadwood and fruits in the summer and fall. It is widespread across North America and grows on deciduous wood.

The color of the mushroom is white becoming yellow with age. It forms from a collection branches that possess short spines. The spines are generally no more than 1/3 inch (1 cm) long. It has a white spore print.

Other Hericium species

September 30th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing on large fallen hardwood tree (presumably Eastern Cottonwood) on East-facing oak woodland slope above large river.

  • Sporocarp with branching structure and short downward hanging spines.
  • Spore Print: white

Observation

Woolly Oyster
Woolly Oyster
Woolly Oyster

Woolly Oyster

Hohenbuehelia mastrucata

The Woolly Oyster (Hohenbuehelia mastrucata) is a rare decomposer of dead wood that can be found in the summer through fall. It can be found growing on Maple (Acer sp.) and other broadleaf trees throughout eastern North America. Fruiting bodies are often on bottom of fallen wood, which can create beautiful circular gill patterns. This specimen was growing on fallen Bitternut Hickory (Carya cordiformis).

The cap shape is evenly rounded (convex) becoming flat (plane) with age. The cap color can be different shades of gray. The consistency is rubbery and moist to the touch (when fresh). The cap is ornamented with distinctive gelatinous spines. The gills are colored whitish to grayish. The spore print is white.

Gills

October 24th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Form Group: Smell: faint, fungoid Taste indistinguishable Form Group: agaric Substrate: Substrate: lignicolous Growth Habit: Growth Habit: imbricate to gregarious Habitat: Growing in low shaded oak/hickory woodland. SE facing slope Growing on Tree: Tree: ( Carya cordiformis ) Decay Type: Decay Type: ( White Rot ) Cap: Pileus: ( Surface: ( texture: pubescent [1] ) ) Surface: Surface: ( texture: pubescent [2] ) Footnotes: [1] Similar to Rhodotus palmatus net venation [2] Similar to Rhodotus palmatus net venation

Observation

Hortiboletus sp-IN03
Hortiboletus sp-IN03
Hortiboletus sp-IN03

Hortiboletus sp-IN03

Hortiboletus sp-IN03 is a provisional name given to a larger species that has been found in Indian Cave State Park.

The cap has an outer red surface that cracks to reveal a whitish-yellow context. The pores are irregular and angular. The hymenophore attachment is free from the stem.

August 16th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing solo at the base of a honey locust in low riparian mixed hardwood area.

Nearby trees: Honey Locust, Elm, Kentucky Coffee Tree, Black Walnut, American Hickory, Northern Red Oak, Red Mulberry, American Sycamore.

  • KOH: pileipellis yellow; hymenium: wine red; stipe: orangish
  • Ammonia: pileipellis: yellowish orange; hymenium: darkening; stipe: brownish
  • Bruising blue on margin between hymenium and pileipellis (presumed flesh bruising)
  • Flesh: sulfur yellow, slowly turning faded blue.
  • Cap: 9.5 cm wide; brick red; cracking with yellow undersurface
  • Pores: dull yellow-olive; bruising blue; pores irregular; pore surface sunken at stipe intersection and decurrent.
  • Stipe: 1cm wide; yellow at base becoming red at apex

DNA Barcode ITS:

AAGTCGTAACAAGGTTTCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGGAAGGATCATTATCGAACATCGAGGGGGACTGTCGCTGGCTTCGGAGCGATCTGGAGCATGTGCACGTCTCTTTTCTTACACACACTCGTGCACAATTTGTAGGCCCTCGAGAGAGGGACTACGTTTTTCCACATCACATCCTTACGGGTATGTAACATGTATGGCGAGAAGGTATCTAGGCTGTCGCTCGACTCCGGTCGGGCCATGGTCGAACAAATATTACAACTTTCAGCAACGGATCTCTTGGCTCTCGCATCGATGAAGAACGCAGCGAATTGCGATAAGTAATGTGAATTGCAGATTTTCAGTGAATCATCGAATCTTTGAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTCGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATTTAATTCTCAACCATGTCTTGTGAAACGAGGCTTGGCTTGGACTTGGGGGTCGCTGGTGGCGAAGGCTGTCGGCTCTCCTGAAATGCATTAGCAAAGGGCAGCAAGTCCGTGACGTGGCACGGCCTTTTCGACGTGATAACGATCGTCGTGGGGCTGGAAGCGCCGGGCATGCATTGATTGTCTTGTTTGCTTCTAATTCATCCTTCGTCAATTGGACTCGGGACTCGACTGGGGGTTGGCTTAGCTATTAGTTGGTCGTGAGGCCGACGAACGCGGCCGGGCTCAGCTTCAGAGCGTTCGTGGTCTGGTTGTCGAAACTTTTTGACACTTTGACCTCAAATCAGGTAGGACTACCCGCTGAACTTAAG

Observation

Lion's Mane Mushroom
Lion's Mane Mushroom
Lion's Mane Mushroom

Lion's Mane Mushroom

Hericium erinaceus

The Lion's Mane Mushroom functions as a parasite of living trees and a decomposer of deadwood and fruits in the summer and fall. It is widespread across North America and grows on deciduous wood (especially Oak).

The color of the mushroom is white becoming yellow with age. It forms as collection of spines all coming out of a single obscured ball growing out of the wood substrate, as opposed to other Hericium species that grow in a branching pattern. They may be difficult to tell apart when the mushroom is young. It has a white spore print.

Cross section

September 30th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing from large Black Oak limb roughly 16ft up, on top of mixed oak/hickory woodland ridge.
  • Sporocarp spherical, past prime, whitish with yellowing spines.
  • Interior flesh white.

Observation

Slender Hedgehog
Slender Hedgehog
Slender Hedgehog

Slender Hedgehog

Hydnum subtilior

The Slender Hedgehog is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in the summer through fall in woods. It seems to be a generalist and can associate with many species of deciduous and conifers trees. Distributed east of the Rocky Mountains.

Under the cap are spines or teeth that set it apart from the gilled mushrooms (agarics). The odor is sweet and taste is pleasant. The spore print is white.

June 30th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing in small group on north-facing slope amongst moss in a mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Black Oak, American Hophornbeam, Ash, American Linden, Shagbark Hickory, and Elm.
  • Cap bald, reminiscent of a bun, with rosecomb mutation and undulating margin.
  • Hymenium consisting of small shallow white teeth.
  • Stipe solid, bald, white with slight brown bruising where handled.
  • Spore Print: white.

Observation

Milk-white Toothed Polypore
Milk-white Toothed Polypore
Milk-white Toothed Polypore

Milk-white Toothed Polypore

Irpex lacteus

Field Characteristics:

52

Resinous Polypore
Resinous Polypore
Resinous Polypore

Resinous Polypore

Ischnoderma resinosum

The Resinous Polypore (Ischnoderma resinosum) is a decomposer of dead deciduous trees and can be found in the fall. It is widespread in North America with its greatest occurrence rate west of the Rocky Mountains.

The top-of-cap shape ranges from fan-shaped to kidney-shaped to semicircular. The cap texture is velvety. The cap color has a "ripple effect" (zonate) and ranges between reddish and darker brownish colors, with the youngest growth whitish toward the margin. The consistency is soft and spongy and can be easily sliced when young. As it ages, it becomes harder and more leathery.

Shape

The under surface is covered in small pores. The pore surface is whitish when young, bruising brownish with handling and with age. The spore print is white.

Pore Surface

September 25th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing on fallen Basswood tree in low, moist woodland area.

Observation 2

October 24th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Form Group: Exudate transparent to yellow to orange to red Form Group: polypore Substrate: Substrate: lignicolous Growth Habit: Growth Habit: imbricate to single to gregarious Habitat: Low , shaded, oak/hickory forest along trail Growing on Tree: Possibly walnut Tree: ( Desciduous ) Decay Type: Decay Type: ( White Rot ) Cap: Pileus: ( Shape: ( Top view: dimidate ); Surface: ( texture: velvety, velutinous to zonate; moisture: dry-dull; color: reddish brown to orange-brown to white ) ) Shape: Shape: ( Top view: dimidate ) Surface: Surface: ( texture: velvety, velutinous to zonate; moisture: dry-dull; color: reddish brown to orange-brown to white )

Observation 1

Acrid Lactarius
Acrid Lactarius
Acrid Lactarius

Acrid Lactarius

Lactarius psammicola

The Acrid Lactarius is a mycorrhizal mushroom that associates with Oak trees and can be found in summer through fall. It is widely distributed and common east of the Rocky Mountains in North America.

This gilled mushroom exudes white latex when cut. The taste is exceptionally spicy (acrid). The cap shape is centrally depressed and regularly catches rain water like a funnel. The top of the cap has a repeating concentric zone pattern which alternate between different tones of yellow. The spore color is yellowish.

Margin

July 14th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregariously in open mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Bur Oak, Chinkapin Oak, Shagbark Hickory, Black Oak, and distant Northern Red Oak.
  • Cap funnel-shaped, tacky (adhering to duff), with orange concentric ring zones and an inrolled margin.
  • Lamellae exuding white latex when cut.
  • Smell: faintly of burnt rubber.
  • Taste: very acrid (spicy).

Observation 1

August 10th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing gregariously in needles and duff under Eastern Red Cedar and Chinquapin oak on the edge of a mixed oak/ hickory woodland. Trees: eastern red cedar, chinquapin oak, red oak, and Elm

  • Cap: funnel shaped with deep central depression (catching rainwater); concentric zonation alternating between different shades of orange. Old specimens brittle. Tacky. Inrolled margin on young specimens, fanning out on older ones.
  • Gills: decurrent, exuding white to cream latex. Latex scarce. Cutting tissue doesn’t result in latex. Existing latex on gills in seemingly random locations.
  • Stipe: short (3cm); firm; tan colored.
  • Smell: fruity; apricot-like
  • Taste: EXTREMELY ACRID (spicy)
  • KOH: pileipellis: faint yellow; gills: indistinct; stipe: darkens surface.
  • Ammonia: pileipellis: indistinct to darkening; gills: indistinct; stipe: darkens

L. psamicola is a close taxon, however, it is described as having a hairy margin in young specimens (Kay, et al, 2022) and this one has a smooth to slightly flocose margin at best in young specimens.

Observation 2

Lactarius subplinthogalus
Lactarius subplinthogalus
Lactarius subplinthogalus

Lactarius subplinthogalus

Lactarius subplinthogalus is a mycorrhizal mushroom that generally associates with Oaks and can be found in the summer and fall. It is widely distributed east of the Rocky Mountains and common in southern states.

Lactarius subplinthogalus exudes a white latex that later turns a salmon-tan color. The gills are noticeably distant. The spore print is cream to buff colored. It also bruises pink where handled or cut similar to L. subvernalis var. cokeri, though the latter is stouter with closer gill spacing.

KOH

July 27th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing in small group along edge of trail in mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Ash, Northern Red Oak, Elm, Shagbark Hickory and Bur Oak.
  • Cap ochre buff with slightly darker depressed center.
  • Lamellae slightly darker than cap, decurrent and widely spaced with frequent partial gills.
  • Stipe same colored as cap with white basal mycelium.
  • Latex white later turning salmon color. Flesh slowly stains pink when exposed.
  • Smell: not distinctive
  • Taste: mildly acrid (spicy)
  • KOH darkening pileipellis and stipe.

Observation

Stout Pink-Staining Lactarius
Stout Pink-Staining Lactarius
Stout Pink-Staining Lactarius

Stout Pink-Staining Lactarius

Lactarius subvernalis var. cokeri

The Stout Pink-Staining Lactarius is a mycorrhizal mushroom that associates with deciduous trees (mostly Oaks) and can be found in summer through fall. It's widely distributed in eastern United States.

Lactarius subvernalis var. cokeri exudes white latex when cut that later turns a salmon-tan color. It also bruises pink where handled or cut similar to L. subplinthogalus, though the latter is more slender and has more distant gill spacing.

Form

July 24th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregariously in open mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Black Oak, Northern Red Oak, American Hophornbeam, Eastern Red Cedar, and distant Bur Oak and Shagbark Hickory.
  • Cap white with central depression and faint concentric zoning near the margin, and lightly bruising red where damaged.
  • Lamellae exuding white latex that later turns a salmon-tan color.
  • Stipe tapering towards base, bruising lightly pinkish to brown (especially at base).
  • Flesh turning pink (slowly maybe 5 min), less on central stipe flesh.
  • Smell: Not distinctive.
  • Taste: Not distinctive.

Observation

Lactarius subserifluus
Lactarius subserifluus
Lactarius subserifluus

Lactarius subserifluus

Lactarius subserifluus is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in the summer. It primarily associates with Oak trees and can be found in woodland settings east of the Rocky Mountains in North America.

It exudes watery, clear latex when cut. The stem is firm and thin which separates it from other Lactarius stems which are more stout, soft, and chambered. The cap shape has a sharp umbo within a shallow depression. The smell and taste are pleasant to fruity.

Form

July 17th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregariously open, west-facing mixed oak woodland slope.
  • Nearby Trees: Northern Red Oak, Ash, Bur Oak, Black Walnut, Elm, and Chinkapin Oak.
  • Cap bald with central umbo on the majority of specimens, some with wavy margin.
  • Gills attached, slightly running down stipe, bruising reddish brown where damaged.
  • Stipe smooth, light tan at apex, becoming dark towards the base. Basal mycelium white and hairy.
  • Flesh exuding clearish liquid when cut.
  • Smell: fruity
  • Taste: mildly fruity but not sweet

Observation

White-pored Chicken Of The Woods

White-pored Chicken Of The Woods

Laetiporus cincinnatus

Field Characteristics:

#389

-Growing at the base of a Northern Red Oak in clearing on North-facing slope in large mixed oak/hickory draw.

  • Caps overlapping in slight rosette fashion.
  • Hymenium white and laden with tiny pores.
Yazoo Lactarius
Yazoo Lactarius
Yazoo Lactarius

Yazoo Lactarius

Lactarius yazooensis-IN01

The Yazoo Lactarius is a mycorrhizal mushroom that associates with deciduous trees (especially Oaks) and can be found in the summer and fall. The name Lactarius yazooensis represents Yazoo, Mississippi, where it was originally described.

Stipe

July 17th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregariously in open oak/hickory woodland.
  • Nearby Trees: Elm, Hackberry, Chinkapin Oak, Northern Red Oak, American Lindon, and distant Black Walnut.
  • Cap viscid and funnel shaped with inrolled margin.
  • Stipe viscid, with irregular shaped potholes, and hollow turning orange where damaged by insects.
  • Lamellae crowded, exuding cream white latex when cut, later turning sulfur-yellow (5-10 mins).
  • Smell: Not distinctive.
  • Taste: Very acrid (spicy).
  • KOH: Orange on trama tissues.

Observation

Chicken Of The Woods
Chicken Of The Woods
Chicken Of The Woods

Chicken Of The Woods

Laetiporus sulphureus

Field Characteristics:

#383

-Growing gregariously in clusters on fallen Northern Red Oak in low, open oak/hickory woodland.

  • Caps fleshy, orange with lighter yellow margins on top.

  • Hymenium brilliant sulfur-yellow color laden with tiny pores.

Blue-Staining Oak Leccinellum
Blue-Staining Oak Leccinellum
Blue-Staining Oak Leccinellum

Blue-Staining Oak Leccinellum

Leccinellum quercophilum

The Blue-Staining Oak Leccinellum is a mycorrhizal mushroom associated with Oak trees that can be found in the summer. It can be found east of the Rocky Mountains.

The cap is bun colored, the surface is uneven to wrinkled, and the shape is evenly rounded. It bruises blue.

Cap

The pore surface is whitish to grayish when young, becoming brownish or yellowish with age.

Hymenophore

The context bruises pink when cut.

Context

The stipe is covered in blackish scales (scabers).

Stipe

July 12th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing solitarily on soil bank near trail in open mixed Oak/hickory woodland.
  • Nearby Trees: American Hophornbeam, Butternut Hickory, Northern Red Oak, Black Oak, American Linden, and Ash.
  • Cap light brown fading to pale tan at thin sterile margin and adorned with winkled pits.
  • Hymenium tan turning lighter towards margin, bruising grayish-purple. Infected with hypomyces.
  • Trama layer bruising grayish-purple when cut, thin compared to tube layer.
  • Stipe thick, peeling frequently, with blackish-brown scabers that darken when handled.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: pleasant
  • KOH: olive-yellow on pileipellis, light olive-yellow on hymenium, and darkening stipe.
  • Ammonia: slight yellowing on stipe.
Wrinkled Bolete
Wrinkled Bolete
Wrinkled Bolete

Wrinkled Bolete

Leccinellum rugosiceps

Field Characteristics:

#181

-Growing gregariously (locally abundant) in narrow grassland surrounded by mixed oak/hickory woodland. -Nearby Trees: Black Oak, Northern Red Oak, and distant Bur Oak.

-Cap bald and wrinkled. -Stipe adorned with orangish-brown scabers that darken when handed and slightly wavy on mature specimens. -Inner flesh slowly turning red when cut.

-Smell: not distinctive. -Taste: slightly acidic to not distinctive. -KOH: dark orange on tube layer, orange on stipe and mustard orange on pileipellis. -Ammonia: flashing yellow on stipe and hymenium and slightly darkening pileipellis.

Lanmaoa pseudosensibilis
Lanmaoa pseudosensibilis
Lanmaoa pseudosensibilis

Lanmaoa pseudosensibilis

Lanmaoa pseudosensibilis is a mycorrhizal bolete that can be found in forests (especially Oak forests) from July-September. Known to the eastern US. When sliced in half, the yellowish contents turn blue. It has a shallow pore surface which is characteristic of Lanmaoa. The pore surface turns from yellow then bruised blue then brownish with age.

The Bolete Filter considers this mushroom edible (Pavelle, 2015). Please take great care to get a solid identification to distinguish it from other toxic boletes.

July 9th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously in low open mixed oak/hickory woodland.

Nearby trees: Red Mulberry, Elm, Red Oak, Chinkapin Oak, Eastern Redbud, Shagbark Hickory, and American Hophornbeam.

  • Stipe with slight red blush at the base. Flesh in stipe where damaged by insects red.
  • Tube layer shallow.
  • Hymenium, stipe, and inner flesh quickly bruising blue (lighter blue on stipe). Bruises later turning brown, then later fading back around to original color.
  • KOH: orange on pileipellis, flesh, and hymenium.
  • Ammonia: blushing blue to pink around the area of contact on the pileipellis and hymenium.

DNA Barcode ITS:

GAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTTGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATTGAATTCTCAACCCATGCCTTGATTGACTTTCGAGGCATGGCTTGGAGTTGGGGGTTGCTGGCAGCGAAAAGCTTGTCGGCTCTCCTGAAATGCATTAGCAAAGGACGGCAAGTCTTTGACGTGCACGGCCTTCGACGTGATAATGATCGTCGTGGCTGGAGCGTCGGACATGCATGAATCGTTCGTGCTTCCAATCCATATGCATTCCCTAGCTCAAGTGAGTTTTCTTAGCTACTAGTTGGTCGCGAGGCCGACGAACGTTGGGCAAGCTTGCTTTTGCTGGGTTGGCATTTTCGAAACTTGACCTCAAATCAGGCAGGACTACCCGCTGAACTTAA

July 11th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously (locally abundant) from soil in mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.

Nearby Trees: Northern Red Oak, Bur Oak, Chinkapin Oak, Black Oak, and Ash.

  • All surfaces bruising a light faded blue, later to brown.
  • Pileipellis subtomentose, ranging from dull brick red in young specimens to a lighter shade when mature. Many specimens with a yellowish margin, enrolled on younger caps.
  • Interior flesh turning blue from upper half of stipe to the cap while the other half turning red where insects damaged flesh.
  • Smell: not distinctive
  • Taste: not distinctive
  • KOH: mustard yellow at apex of stipe and darer orange near the base. Orange on pileipellis with darkened brown margin around area of contact.
  • Ammonia: Blue on hymenium, darkening upper stipe and yellowish-orange, and flashing blue, then dark brown on pileipellis.
Beaver Lentinellus
Beaver Lentinellus
Beaver Lentinellus

Beaver Lentinellus

Lentinellus castoreus

The Beaver Lentinellus is a decomposer of dead wood that can be found in the summer and fall. It's an uncommon Lentinellus sp. and has a great deal of morphological variability, so it can be difficult to distinguish between the more common Lentinellus ursinus.

It is a gilled mushroom without a stem (sessile). The cap can be many colors: white to multi-toned tans, reds, and blacks. The gills are saw-toothed and white to yellowish. The spore print is white. The taste is bitter and menthol-like.

Gills

July 25th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing scattered on rotting Bitternut Hickory log in low mixed oak/hickory woodland, near creek.
  • Cap subtomentose with a lobed margin and fringed edges. Darker brown at base, becoming lighter towards the margin.
  • Gills crowded, serrated, short gills frequent and discoloring darker brown.
  • Flesh tough and spongy.
  • Smell: faint, almost sweet.
  • Taste: Bitter initially, turning into a cooling menthol sensation.
  • Spore Print: white

Observation

Bear Lentinus
Bear Lentinus
Bear Lentinus

Bear Lentinus

Lentinellus ursinus

The Bear Lentinus is a decomposer that can be found on dead wood in the fall. Widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere.

It is a gilled mushroom without a stem (sessile). The gills are saw-toothed and colored whitish to yellowish to pinkish. The spore print is white. The taste is bitter.

Gills

October 11th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing on fallen Bitternut Hickory in mixed oak/hickory woodland.
  • Caps semicircular, reddish-brown.
  • Lamellae light yellowish-orange, close to crowded and eccentric.
  • Stipe absent
  • Spore Print: white

Observation

Wolf's Milk

Wolf's Milk

Lycogala epidendrum

Rusty Pinwheel
Rusty Pinwheel
Rusty Pinwheel

Rusty Pinwheel

Marasmius fulvoferrugineus

The Rusty Pinwheel is a small decomposer that can be found in duff and leaf litter from summer through fall east of the Rocky Mountains. Macroscopically, it seems indistinguishable from Marasmius siccus and microscopic analysis is needed to separate the species.

The cap is pleated and shaped like a pinwheel.

Cap

The gills are white and distant.

Gills

The stems of Marasmius mushrooms are elastic. This one has a dark to black stem and white basal mycelium at the point of attachment to the substrate.

Stipe

July 7th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing gregariously (abundant) among oak woodland duff in a low riparian woodland area near a creek. Oak trees on the slope above.

  • Smell: faintly foul
  • KOH: pileipellis: dull yellow (spicy or dijon mustard yellow) white mycelium; stipe: darkens black, whitens the orange.
  • Taste: mushroomy phenolic aging into the sensation of back pepper.
Metuloidea reniformis
Metuloidea reniformis
Metuloidea reniformis

Metuloidea reniformis

Metuloidea reniformis is a decomposer of wood and can be found in groups from February through October. Named in 2021, older literature may reference species matching this morphology as Steccherinum reniforme, Steccerinum rawakense, or Steccerinum subrawakense.

The cap is thin and is attached to wood without a stem (sessile). Generally colored brown with zones of different color, though it can fade with age to be whitish with or without zones. The surface under the cap in young specimens can look like fine, reptilian scales (which are densely crowded teeth), which later grow into distinguishable tooth-like structures with age.

Hymenophore1

Hymenophore2

June 27th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Additional photos found a day later in the same area and added to observation.

Growing gregariously in clustered on a rotting hardwood log in low mixed oak/hickory woodland slope. Flesh tough/leathery.

Smell: Faintly pleasant. Mealy, like oatmeal.

KOH: Organish-brown on cap surface and slightly yellow on hymenium.

DNA Barcode ITS: AAGTCGTAACAAGGTTTCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGGAAGGATCATTATTGAATGAACTTGGGCAAAGCTGTCGCTGGCCTCAGCAATGGGGCATGTGCACGCTTTGTTCATCCACCTTCACACCTCTGTGCACTTCTCATGGGTTGGGTTGCGCTAGTAAAATAGCAAAGCCCTTCTCATGTGTTTACATCACATACTACAAAGTTTTTAGAATGTTACAATCATGCGTCAATGCATATAATACAACTTTCAGCAACGGATCTCTTGGCTCTCGCATCGATGAAGAACGCAGCGAAATGCGATAAGTAATGTGAATTGCAGAATTCAGTGAATCATCGAATCTTTGAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTTGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATGGTATTCTCAACCCTCCTGCATTTTTTTTGCAGTTGGGCTTGGACTTGGAGGTTTTTTTGCTGGTGGTCAAACCTTGTGTTTGAACGCGGGCTCCTCTGAAAAGCATTAGCTGGAATATTACTGAGCACGTTTCAATGTGATAATTGTCTACGTTGCTACGTCTCGGTATTAAATGTGTTTCAGCTTCAAACCGTCCCTTGCGGACAATATATCTGAACATCTGACCTCAAATCAGGTAGGACTACCCGCTGAACTTAAG

Observation

Black-staining Polypore
Black-staining Polypore
Black-staining Polypore

Black-staining Polypore

Meripilus sumstinei

Field Characteristics:

130

3 rosettes growing at/near the base of a large standing, dead, charred, Northern Red Oak on north facing Oak woodland slope. Outer margins darken to black. Flesh white and fibrous.

Devil's Dipstick
Devil's Dipstick
Devil's Dipstick

Devil's Dipstick

Mutinus elegans

Field Characteristics:

#281

Growing clustered under brush in open mixed oak/hickory woodland edge.

  • Egg thin, white and membranous.
  • Smell: putrid
Walnut Mycena
Walnut Mycena
Walnut Mycena

Walnut Mycena

Mycena crocea

The Walnut Mycena (Mycena crocea) is a decomposer of Walnut and Hickory shells and can be found from late summer through fall. It is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains in North America and can be found in wooded settings composed of Walnut (Juglans sp.) and/or Hickory (Carya) trees.

M. crocea is colored distinctly orange to yellow. It is easily distinguished by its color and habit of growing on buried nut shells. The gills are color whitish to yellowish. The gill attachment is attached to the stem or creating an "S"-like loop on attachment to the stem (sinuate). The stem is much longer than the width of the cap with white basal mycelium. The spore print is white.

Gills

Stem

The terminal ends of the mycelium on the mushroom's gills are quite unique. Below is a video tour of these structures.

September 12th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing gregariously on Black Walnut shells in low woodland area.

Observation

Eastern American Jack-o'-lantern
Eastern American Jack-o'-lantern
Eastern American Jack-o'-lantern

Eastern American Jack-o'-lantern

Omphalotus illudens

Field Characteristics:

#439

-Growing clustered (fused at base) at the base of rotting hardwood stump in open mixed oak/hickory woodland.

  • Caps yellowish-orange, planoconvex to depressed with wavy margin at maturity.
  • Lamellae similarly colored as cap, close-crowded and decurrent.
  • Stipe more dull colored compared to other portions, sturdy and not tapering much.

Additional Details

  • KOH: greenish on pileipellis and stipe.
  • Spore Print: white - copious amounts of spores deposited.
Bleeding Fairy Helmet
Bleeding Fairy Helmet
Bleeding Fairy Helmet

Bleeding Fairy Helmet

Mycena haematopus

Field Characteristics:

#371

-Growing on hardwood log in mixed oak/hickory woodland.

-Caps relatively bell-shaped, wine red with a lighter scalloped margin.

  • Lamellae whitish and adnate.
  • Stipe similarly colored to cap, exuding dark red liquid when broken.
Luminescent Panellus
Luminescent Panellus
Luminescent Panellus

Luminescent Panellus

Panellus stipticus

Field Characteristics:

#449

-Growing on rotting hardwood log in mixed oak/hickory woodland.

  • Caps semicircular, pale buff color with dense matted hairs on pileipellis.
  • Lamellae similarly colored as cap with frequent partial gills.
  • Stipe attached off center, covered in short dense hairs.
Perenniporia ohiensis
Perenniporia ohiensis
Perenniporia ohiensis

Perenniporia ohiensis

Perenniporia ohiensis is a common small conk that can be found year-round. It grows on the dead wood of broadleaf trees and is commonly found on fence posts. It's distinguishable by its small size and round pores. The cap turns from cream-colored to black with age. The cap will turn reddish with the application dilute KOH (potassium hydroxide).

June 20th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

  • Growing on old wooden fence post (presumably Osage Orange) in mixed oak/hickory woodland.
  • KOH on top of cap reddish-brown, darker brown on inner flesh, and orangish on hymenium.

Obs4

DNA Barcode ITS:

GAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTTGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATGAAAATCTTCAACCTGTAGTCCTTTGCGATCTATAGGCTTGGACTTGGAGGCTTGTCGGTGTAGTGCCGGCTCCTCTTAAATACATTAGCTTGATTCCTTGCGGATTGGCTGTTGGTGTGATAATTGTTTACGCCGCGACCATGAAGCGTTTGGCGAGCTTCTAATCGTCTTGTAAGAGACATTGTTATGACCTTTGACCTCAAATCAGGTAGGACTACCCGCTGAACTTAA

May 13th, 2024 Field Notes - Fontenelle Forest:

  • Growing on rotting hardwood log in low spring fed oak woodland draw.
  • Hymenophore comprised of small, well-spaced, circular pores.

Obs3

June 16th, 2024 Field Notes - Niobrara Valley Preserve:

Spore Print: whitish

Obs1

June 17th, 2024 Field Notes - Niobrara Valley Preserve:

Obs2

Ash Conk
Ash Conk
Ash Conk

Ash Conk

Perenniporia fraxinophila

The Ash Conk (Perenniporia fraxinophila) is parasitic on Ash trees (Fraxinus sp.). These conks can be found year-round and appear slightly emerging from the wood. Many times it may go unnoticed as it blends in to the shape of the Ash bark.

The fertile surface is whitish and composed of small pores that are rounded or oblonged in shape; 3-5 pores per mm. The top if the cap is colored dark green to blackish.

Pores

May 16th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

  • Growing on Ash tree (roughly 4ft up) in low creek bank in Oak/Hickory woodland.
  • KOH orangish-brown on hymenium.
Dune Stinkhorn
Dune Stinkhorn
Dune Stinkhorn

Dune Stinkhorn

Phallus hadriani

Field Characteristics:

#372

-Growing alone (in egg stage) next to trail in an open mixed oak/hickory woodland.

  • Peridium bruising purple.
Gilled Bolete
Gilled Bolete
Gilled Bolete

Gilled Bolete

Phylloporus sp-NE01

Though mostly genetically similar to boletes, rather than having pores this mushroom has gills. Features like size, stature, and color might suggest that this is a ruby bolete until the underside of the cap is examined.

Similar in form to Phylloporus leucomycelinus.

Gills

July 31st, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously on east-facing open mixed oak/hickory woodland slope.

Nearby Trees: Chinkapin Oak, Northern Red Oak, and Ash.

  • Cap reddish-orange, subtomentose and not bruising where damaged.
  • Hymenium bright yellow with frequent short gills and cross-veins present.
  • Stipe reddish upper 1/2 to 2/3, tapering to a light yellow base.
  • Basal mycelium white.
  • Smell: not distinctive.
  • Taste: slightly acidic.
  • KOH: dark orange with darker outline on pileipellis.
  • Ammonia: quickly flashing green then darkening on pileipellis.

Observation

DNA Barcode ITS:

AAGTCGTAACAAGGTTTCCGTAGGTGAACCTGCGGAAGGATCATTATCGAACAGAATAGAACAGGGCAGAGGGATTGTCGCTGGCGGGTCTTTCTCTCGCATGTGCACGTCCTTCTGCTTTTACTCTATTCACACTCTTAACACCTGTGCACTTTTTGTAGGTCCCCCTCTTCGAAAGAAGAGGGATCTAGGATCTATGTATTTATCATATCACCTCACATGTATGGCCAGAATGAAAACATAATAAAATAAAAATACAACTTTCAGCAATGGATCTCTTGGTTCTCGCATCGATGAAGAACGCAGCGAATTGCGATAAGTAATGTGAATTGCAGATTTCCAGTGAATCATCGAATCTTTGAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTTGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATTAGAATCAATCAACCATGCTTTCTTGACGGGAGAGCATGGCTTGGAGTTGGGGGTTGCTGGCGTTTCACCGTCAGCTCTCCTTAAATGCATTAGCGATCGAGTCGGGCTGGTCTTTCGACGTGCACGGCCTTGGACGTGATAAAGATCGTCCTGGGCTGGAGCGTTTGGTCGGCATGACATAGATCGATCGCGAAAGATATGGGAGGGGGGGAAGGTGATGGCGATGTGATCGGTCTGGTTGGAGCTTAGAGCTACTAGGCAGTCTTGAGAGAGGCTGGCGAAAACCGAGCGAAAGACAGATCGAGCTCAGAGCTTGAGCTTGAGCTTTCCTAATCGAAAAAGAAAAGATGGGGGAAGGGGATGGCGATGTGATCTGTCCGGCGGAGCTTTAGCTACTAGGCAGTCTTGAGAGAGGCTGGCGAAAACTGGAGCAAAGACGGACGGTGATCGGAGCTTGAGCTTTCCTTTGTTTGATCTTGGACCTGTTGACCTCAAATCAGGTAGGACTACCCGCTGAACTTAAG

Coral-pink Merulius
Coral-pink Merulius
Coral-pink Merulius

Coral-pink Merulius

Phlebia incarnata

Field Characteristics:

#234

-Growing amongst Stereum species on fallen Northern Red Oak log in low mixed oak/hickory woodland, near creek.

-KOH: bright florescent yellow on top of cap, dark red with a yellow margin on hymenium. -Spore Print: white.

Common Oyster
Common Oyster
Common Oyster

Common Oyster

Pleurotus ostreatus

The Common Oyster is a decomposer and nematode hunter that can be found in the fall through the early summer. It grows on deciduous (and sometimes coniferous) dead wood and is widely distributed.

The top-view of the cap is circular, half-circular, fan-shaped, oyster-shaped to kidney shaped. The side-view of the cap is evenly rounded to flat, with an occasional central depression. The cap surface color is dark gray to tan to whitish. The white form can sometimes look similar to the closely related Pale Oyster. The featured specimens are among those that are confusing to separate.

The stem is usually quite sort or absent, but most often absent. Its attachment to the cap is variable, sometimes central bottom, off to the side on the bottom, or attached to the side of the cap (central, eccentric, or lateral, respectively). The gills run down the stem (decurrent). The pictured specimens don't have a stem.

Form

Along with decomposing dead wood, this mushroom is interesting because it hunts for nematodes. It creates tiny loops of mycelium that it uses to trap the microscopic worm-shaped organisms in a grip of death. Please enjoy the video below describing the phenomenon in detail.

July 17th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing on cut end of Bitternut Hickory log in low moist mixed oak/hickory woodland near small creek.
  • Smell: mildly anise.

October 24th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Habitat:

  • Growth Habit: Connate
  • Substrate: Lignicolous
  • Tree: Carya ovata

Attachment: Eccentric

Pileus:

  • Shape:
    • Top view: Conchate
    • Profile: Convex to Plane
  • Surface:
    • Texture: Smooth to Rimose [1]
    • Color: Buff to Cinnamon-Buff to Cream to Buff-Yellow

[1] Rimose towards margin.

Pale Oyster
Pale Oyster
Pale Oyster

Pale Oyster

Pleurotus pulmonarius

The Pale Oyster is a decomposer of dead deciduous trees and can be found in spring through fall. It is widespread across North America.

The top-of-cap shape depends on whether it is growing along the side of its substrate or the top of it. If growing on the top, it is generally circular. If growing from the side, it is evenly rounded, half-circular, fan-shaped, to "lung-shaped" from which the mushroom gets its name "pulmonarius" (pulmo meaning "lung"). All of these shapes can be seen in the pictured specimen. The side-of-cap shape is evenly rounded to flat and commonly with a central depression. As the common name "Pale Oyster" suggests, the color is pale in comparison to other oyster mushrooms and is usually a one to two-toned whitish to cream (or tan to yellow in old specimens). It can sometimes be confused with the closely related Common Oyster when the latter expresses a white form.

The gills are attached to and run down the stem (decurrent), are whitish becoming yellow with age. The spore print is white.

Gills

The stem is generally quite short or absent, but more often present. Its attachment to the cap is variable, sometimes central bottom, off to the side on the bottom, or attached to the side of the cap (central, eccentric, or lateral, respectively). The below picture is eccentric, though, the specimen itself presents all three categories and is a great example of morphological variation in an individual specimen.

Stem attachment

September 13th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing scattered and clustered on fallen American Linden Tree in large mixed oak/hickory woodland draw.
  • Caps tan, tacky with a lighter wavy and lightly striated margin.
  • Lamellae decurrent white, close with frequent partial gills.
  • Stipe white, centrally oriented or off to one side.
  • Smell: classic oyster mushroom smell, slightly anise.
  • Taste: not distinctive.
  • Spore Print: white
Scaly Shield
Scaly Shield
Scaly Shield

Scaly Shield

Pluteus petasatus

The Scaly Shield is a decomposer of dead deciduous trees that can be found from spring through fall. It can sometimes be found growing from soil attached to buried wood or growing from wood chips or stumps in urban areas. It is widespread throughout North America growing alone or in small groups. This specimen was found growing from dead American Linden.

Gills

Pluteus petasatus has an evenly rounded to flat cap shape commonly with a small bump in the center (umbo). There are generally brown scales in the center of the cap, from which this mushroom gets its common name. The gills are free from the stem, generally white later into maturity (as compared to its closely related Pluteus cervinus), which later become pinkish with the development of pinkish brown spores. The stem generally has an enlarged base, without an annulus or volva. The spore print is brownish pink.

Habitat

June 26th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing on the exposed rotting roots of large dead American Linden tree in the bottom of moist/shady draw dominated by pawpaw trees in woodland. Pileipellis slightly tacky. Taste: not distinctive.

Wine Velvet Shield
Wine Velvet Shield
Wine Velvet Shield

Wine Velvet Shield

Pluteus seticeps

The Wine Velvet Shield is a small decomposer that can be found on dead deciduous wood (well-rotted, sometimes covered in moss) and can be found in the spring to summer. It is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains. This specimen was found on a hardwood log in low woodland area near creek.

The cap is a wine-color to orangish-brown with a velvety texture. The cap width is 1/3-1 inch (8-24 mm) The gills are white when young becoming pinkish with age, and free from the stem. The stem is translucent yellowish and does not possess an annulus nor a volva.

June 14th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • LBM on hardwood log in low woodland area near creek.
  • Pileipellis velvety.
  • Gills: Free from stipe, white when young, then turning to salmon-colored with age.
Saupe's Pluetus
Saupe's Pluetus
Saupe's Pluetus

Saupe's Pluetus

Pluteus saupei

Saupe's Pluetus is a decomposer of dead deciduous wood and can be found in the summer. It can be found growing singularly or in groups, but never clustered together at the stem. It is a mushroom with few scientific collections, with only reported collections from the Great Plains in North America. It is named after Dr. Stephen G. Saupe, who collected the first specimen for the scientific description (holotype), and who discovered the presence of psilocybin in the genus Pluteus.

Scales

This mushroom is marked poisonous due to the presence of psilocybin, which causes the blue bruising. Although blue bruising doesn't always indicate psilocybin (as with many Boletes), it does in the genera Pluteus, Panaeolus, and Psilocybe. Psilocybin can generate intense hallucinations and mind-altering effects, so eating this mushroom should be avoided. Please see the North American Mycological Society's toxicology page for more information.

Blue

Pluteus saupei has a distinctive top-of-cap shape that is oblong/elliptical (but sometimes circular like other Pluteus), with a dark brown center with scales and noticeable grooves (striations) from the margin to the brown center. The side-view shape is evenly rounded to flat.

Cap

The gills are free from the stem, starting white when young and becoming pink with age. The stem is round, relatively even, and without an annulus or volva.

Stem

June 30th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Pluteus americanus or sister taxa.
  • Growing gregariously on well decayed hardwood log (potentially Ash) in low moist mixed oak/hickory woodland near small creek.
  • Stipe and hymenium slowly bruising blue 10-15 minutes later after handling.
  • Center of pileipellis adorned with small dark scales. See the photos of the small specimen, which was found a few days later in the same log.
  • Taste slightly phenolic
  • Smell not distinct to faintly pleasant.
Pleated Pluteus
Pleated Pluteus
Pleated Pluteus

Pleated Pluteus

Pluteus longistriatus

The Pleated Pluteus is a decomposer that can be found on dead deciduous trees and woody debris in the summer and fall. It is mostly found east of the Rocky Mountains, but is sometimes found in western North America.

Cap

The cap has distinctive, brownish striations that extend from the cap margin almost to the center, that separate with age to reveal whitish flesh underneath. The gills are free from the stem and turn from white when young to pink with age. The fruiting bodies are small and fragile. The spore print is pink.

Gills

July 27th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing gregarious on fallen Ash in low, moist, open Oak/Hickory draw.
  • Cap light colored with long striations from margin to disc, halfway to entire.
  • Gills pink, free, with partial gills
  • Stem iridescent fibrillose.
Veined Shield
Veined Shield
Veined Shield

Veined Shield

Pluteus thomsonii-IN03

The Veined Shield is a photogenic decomposer of dead deciduous trees and woodland debris in the spring and fall. It can be found mostly distributed in eastern North America, but also has been reported in California. Pluteus thomsonii is better considered as "Pluteus thomsonii group" as many genetically distinct species have been found in North America alone, hence the provisional name for this specimen, Pluteus thomsonii-IN03, which is the third genetically distinct P. thomsonii-like species found in Indiana alone... Don't you love the chaos and confusion of North American mycology?

Pattern

The most distinctive feature of Veined Shield is of course the veined pattern on the cap surface which is highly variable and always a fun find. Doesn't nature have the most bizarre patterns? The cap is evenly rounded to flat in shape with radially aligned lines at the margin.

Gills

The gills are free from the stem and start out white colored when young becoming pink with age. The stem is even and doesn't possess an annulus nor a volva. The spore print is pink, which can be seen on the stem in the following photo.

Spore print

September 13th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing on large brown-rot hardwood log in low shady, riparian woodland area.
  • Cap with raised wrinkled texture on pileipellis.
  • Lamellae pinkish and free from stipe.
  • Stipe slightly gray-blue at apex.
Oak Bracket
Oak Bracket
Oak Bracket

Oak Bracket

Pseudoinonotus dryadeus

Field Characteristics:


Nickname: Pseudoinonotus dryadeus Alternate ID: 429 locations: 40.219732, -95.3921555 Observed at: 2023-09-28T19:09:33.006Z


habitat: Lignicolous (on wood)

growth habit: Gregarious (growing as a group)

Cap: surface moisture texture: dry - dull Ä1Ñ

Stem: locations: sessile (missing)

Ä1Ñ With potholes fill amber guttation

Wrinkled Peach
Wrinkled Peach
Wrinkled Peach

Wrinkled Peach

Rhodotus reticeps

Field Characteristics:

#250

  • Growing solitarily on Hackberry in low Southwest-facing slope in mixed oak/hickory woodland near creek.
  • Cap faded pink, wrinkled with a vein-like pattern.
  • Lamellae pale pink with frequent partial gills.
  • Stipe with white basal mycelium.

-Additional Info

  • Smell: pleasant, fragrant
  • Taste: slight acrid sensation
  • KOH orange on pileipellis and hymenium.
Splitgill Mushroom
Splitgill Mushroom
Splitgill Mushroom

Splitgill Mushroom

Schizophyllum commune

The Splitgill Mushroom (Schizophyllum commune) is a decomposer of wood that is possibly the most common mushroom on the world. It can be found in more areas than most other mushrooms possibly due to the species having around 23,000 mating types (genders), which presumably increases its success of finding a mate.

In the correct conditions, the gills will open up or "split" to increase exposed area. Hence, the name "Split Gill". The specimen collected here is not split open at the moment.

Form

Enveloping Crust
Enveloping Crust
Enveloping Crust

Enveloping Crust

Sebacina incrustans

Field Characteristics:

#194

Growing (locally abundant) on stems of nearby herbaceous plants, like Desmodium, and encapsulating woodland duff.

-Nearby Trees: Bur Oak, Chinkapin Oak, Shagbark Hickory, Black Oak, and distant Northern Red Oak.

-Areas of fresh growth white. -Flesh slightly tough and leathery.

Smell: not distinctive. Taste: not distinctive.

Ringless Honey Mushroom
Ringless Honey Mushroom
Ringless Honey Mushroom

Ringless Honey Mushroom

Desarmillaria caespitosa

The Ringless Honey Mushroom (Desarmillaria caespitosa) is a decomposer and tree parasite that can be found growing in large clusters from buried tree roots in late summer and fall. It may appear to be growing from the soil, but it is actually decomposing roots in the soil. It mostly grows from Oak (Quercus sp.) and Silver Maple (Acer saccharinum) and is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains in North America.

The cap color is a range of "honey"-like colors. The cap shape is evenly rounded, becoming flat, then pothole-shaped (depressed) or with a small bump (umbo) with age. The cap surface is ornamented with hair-like scales that are more abundant towards the center and rub off with age.

Cap

The gill color is whitish bruising pinkish. The gill attachment is running down the stem (decurrent) or attached with a small bit running down the stem (decurrent tooth). The stem shape is tapered at the base due to the clustering habit. The spore print is white.

Gills

September 11th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Growing tightly clustered at the base of dead American Hophornbeam tree on West-facing mixed oak/hickory woodland slope.

  • Cap honey colored with dark orangish brown hairs towards the center, hygrophanous, and margins wavy and striated.
  • Lamellae light tan, wavy, decurrent, with frequent partial gills.
  • Stipe similar color to gills, fibrulose, slightly darkening where handled.

Additional Info

  • Smell: not distinctive
  • Taste: not distinctive
  • KOH orangish on pileipellis.

Observation

Thin-Walled Maze Polypore
Thin-Walled Maze Polypore
Thin-Walled Maze Polypore

Thin-Walled Maze Polypore

Daedaleopsis confragosa

The Thin-Walled Maze Polypore is a decomposer of dead wood that can be found year-round, though mostly fruiting in the warm months. Widely distributed. It grows on deciduous wood and rarely coniferous wood. It grows on Oak less often than Daedalea quercina, which generally has thicker "maze" walls.

The cap surface color can be tan to brown to white. The cap pattern presents different zones of color in a "ripple" effect from the center outward (concentrically zoned). The pore surface has a great deal of morphological variation which can present pores, gill-like elongated pores, or (most commonly) maze-like structures. When fresh, it bruises salmon-pink to brownish where handled. KOH darkens surface colors, and ammonia changes surface colors pinkish, at least in fresh samples.

Hymenophore

July 27th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

Observation 1

KOH

Ammonia

September 28th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

habitat: Lignicolous (on wood)

growth habit: Gregarious (growing as a group)

Cap: shape: flabelliform (fan-shaped) [1]; texture: zonate to velvety, velutinous (short, soft) to pubescent (finely fuzzy) to smooth to uneven (bumpy); surface moisture texture: dry - dull; margin shape: straight; margin: undulating (wavy) to entire, even, regular

Gills: thickness: tapering; spacing: crowded to close; edges: eroded (gnawed) to crisped (crinkled); misc features: arid (dry)

Stem: locations: eccentric (off-center) to sessile (missing)

[1] KOH dark gray Ammonia red

Growing on oak

Observation 2

KOH

Ammonia

Crowded Parchment
Crowded Parchment
Crowded Parchment

Crowded Parchment

Stereum complicatum

The Crowded Parchment is a common, widespread decomposer of dead deciduous wood (especially Oak) in wooded areas. Although persisting year-round, new growth can be most easily observed in the spring and summer after times of extended rainfall. Growing generally out of the cracks of bark, it can be distinguished by its orange color and chaotic shelving pattern. It has a white spore print.

Form

July 27th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing in a shelving and resupinate matter on a downed Bur Oak branch on Southwest-facing oak/hickory slope above creek.
  • Caps variable colors (reddish-gray/orange).
  • Hymenium orange with concentric zonation, and a loped margin.
White Coral Jelly Fungus
White Coral Jelly Fungus
White Coral Jelly Fungus

White Coral Jelly Fungus

Sebacina sparassoidea

Field Characteristics:

#267

-Growing solitarily in open mixed oak/hickory woodland. -Nearby Trees: Black Oak, Bur Oak, Ash, Shagbark Hickory, American Hophornbeam, and Elm.

-Fruiting body composed of flexible lobes appearing to be hollowed, viscid and subtransparent. -Tapered pseudostem underneath attached to soil.

-Smell: reminiscent of pine trees. -Taste: not distinctive.

-Spore Print: white.

Lobed Stereum
Lobed Stereum
Lobed Stereum

Lobed Stereum

Stereum lobatum

The Lobed Stereum is a decomposer of deciduous wood and can be found year-round, but grows in the spring and summer in heavy rains. Widely distributed.

Stereum lobatum can be distinguished by its thick zonation, bruising yellow on the bottom surface, and thin matting of hairs on the top of the cap (when fresh, the hairs rub off with age to create a smooth surface). Widely variable in color based on age and hydration level.

Compare to Stereum fasciatum. Historically placed in the possibly deprecated "Stereum ostrea complex" or "False Turkey Tail". Commonly mixed up with Turkey Tail (Trametes versicolor), which has visible pores on the bottom to the naked eye, whereas this species is smooth.

Form

Fasciating Stereum
Fasciating Stereum
Fasciating Stereum

Fasciating Stereum

Stereum fasciatum

The Fasciating Stereum is a decomposer of deciduous wood and can be found year-round, but grows in the spring and summer in heavy rains. Widely distributed.

Stereum fasciatum can be distinguished by its coarse hairs in thin zones (before rubbing off with age), not bruising on the bottom surface, and thin zonation (if at all). Widely variable in color based on age and hydration level.

Compare to Stereum lobatum. Historically placed in the possibly deprecated "Stereum ostrea complex" or "False Turkey Tail". Commonly mixed up with Turkey Tail (Trametes versicolor), which has visible pores on the bottom to the naked eye, whereas this species is smooth.

Form

June 29th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing on the limb of dead Northern Red Oak in large oak woodland draw.
  • KOH: darkening hymenium slightly. Cap surface negative.
  • Finely hairy.
  • Colors: blue, red, green.
American Lurid Bolete
American Lurid Bolete
American Lurid Bolete

American Lurid Bolete

Suillellus ameriluridus

The American Lurid Bolete (Suillellus ameriluridus) is a mycorrhizal mushroom that is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains and associated with Oak trees. It can be found in the summer and fall. This mushroom is vividly colored and bruises blue where handled. Suillellus ameriluridus is a provisional name. It is awaiting final publication distinguishing the European Suillellus luridus from this species. More bolete news to come!

The word lurid gives credence to its absurd coloration.

Lurid (adjective): Vivid in a way that is intended to shock or be sensational, often by emphasizing details that are shocking, gruesome, or exaggerated (Merriam-Webster, 2025).

Blue

The stem is yellow/red and has a reddish fish net-like pattern (reticulation) easily bruising blue to the touch. It is generally more red towards the base of the tapering stem.

Stem Color:

Deep Reddish Orange
#AA381E
Strong Orange Yellow
#EAA221
Bruising
Deep Blue
#00416A
Blackish Blue
#202830

Stem

Its pore color starts a dark red or orangish when young, transitioning into an orange to yellow color when mature. Quickly staining blue when cut.

Pore color:

Dark Red
#722F37
Deep Reddish Orange
#AA381E
Aging to
Strong Reddish Orange
#D9603B
Strong Orange Yellow
#EAA221
Deep Orange Yellow
#C98500
Bruising
Brilliant Blue
#4997D0
Strong Blue
#0067A5
Deep Blue
#00416A
Blackish Blue
#202830

Pores

S. ameriluridus promptly turns blue where cut, later transitioning to blackish.

Bruising
Brilliant Blue
#4997D0
Strong Blue
#0067A5
Deep Blue
#00416A
Blackish Blue
#202830

Cut Blue

Edibility for this species is currently considered iffy (Pavelle, 2015) and not advised by the authors of this webpage.

August 1st, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

  • Growing gregariously in open mixed oak woodland edge.
  • Nearby Trees: Black Walnut, American Linden, Bur Oak, Northern Red Oak, Elm, Ash and Black Oak.
  • Cap light orange, bald, slowly bruising dark blue where handled/damaged. Pileipellis color rubbing off on fingers and collection bag.
  • Hymenium dingy orange, with large circular pores that quickly bruise dark blue where handled/damaged, sunken at stipe apex.
  • Stipe light yellow at apex with numerous small reddish-brown scabers, turning wine red and subtomentose at base.
  • Basal mycelium pale yellowish.
  • Tube layer easily separable from orange trama.
  • Outer flesh staining wax bags yellow.
  • Smell: not distinctive
  • Taste: not distinctive
  • KOH: Dark orange on pileipellis, stipe flesh and tube layer, and pale orange on trama.
  • Ammonia yellowish-green on pileipellis, pale orange on trama, yellowish on tube layer and stipe flesh.
  • FeSO4 dark gray on pileipellis.
  • Spore Print: light olive brown.

DNA Barcode ITS: GAACGCACCTTGCGCTCCTTGGTATTCCGAGGAGCATGCCTGTTTGAGTGTCATCGAATTCTCAACCATGTCTTGATCGATTTCGAGGCCATGGCTTGGAGTTGGGGGTTGCTGGCGGCGACGAGCCGTCGGCTCCCCTGAAATGCATTAGCGAAGGGCAGCAAGTCTCTCGACGTGCACGGCCTTCGACGTGATAATGATCGTCGTGGCTGGAGCGTTCGGACTGCATGAATGGTCCTGTGCTTCTAATGTCCCCCATCGCCTTATGGCGTGTGTTTCGAAACTTGACCTCAAATCAGGTAGGACTACCCGCTGAACTTAA

Observation

Latte Bracket
Latte Bracket
Latte Bracket

Latte Bracket

Trametes lactinea

The Latte Bracket is a decomposer of deciduous wood and pines that can be observed year-round, but only grows in times of heavy, warm rain. It is widespread in eastern North America.

The top surface of the fruiting body is slightly hairy (tomentose), and white to cream to brown in a zoned pattern. The top-view shape of the cap is half-circular to kidney-shaped, and the side-view shape is evenly rounded to flat. The consistently is tough and corky. The pores on the underside are round to oblong to angular, but never maze-like. Trametes lactinea was considered a tropical mushroom, but has more recently been found across eastern North America suggesting that it may have extended its range over the last few decades.

Form

July 10th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing on hardwood twig (possibly Elm) in low, mixed oak/hickory woodland.
  • Top of cap slightly tomentose and damp (due to recent rains).
  • Hymenium composed of white irregular/angular pores.
  • Smell: strong unpleasant rubber aroma, reminiscent of Scleroderma citrinum.
  • Taste: strongly bitter.
  • Spore Print: white
Northern Cinnabar Polypore
Northern Cinnabar Polypore
Northern Cinnabar Polypore

Northern Cinnabar Polypore

Trametes cinnabarina

The Northern Cinnabar Polypore is a decomposer of dead deciduous trees (usually Oak) and can be found spring through fall. It is widely distributed.

The top-view of the cap is kidney-shaped to half-circular. The side-view of the cap evenly rounded to flat with age, and measures 3/4 to 6 inches (2-13 cm) in width. The color is bright orangish to reddish. The pore surface a similar color to the cap and the pores are rounded to slightly angular. It does not have a stem (sessile). It is sometimes confused with Trametes sanguinea, but the latter is found in more tropical climates.

Pores

September 28th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

habitat: Lignicolous (on wood) [1] growth habit: Gregarious (growing as a group)

Cap: shape: convex (evenly rounded) to plane (flat) to dimidiate (half-circle) to flabelliform (fan-shaped) [2]; texture: smooth to glabrous (bald) to zonate; surface moisture texture: dry - dull

Stem: location: sessile (missing)

[1] Growing on downed hardwood branch in open, west facing slope in Oak/hickory woodland. [2] Applanate

Volvopluteus michiganensis
Volvopluteus michiganensis
Volvopluteus michiganensis

Volvopluteus michiganensis

June 19th, 2024 Field Notes - Niobrara Valley Preserve:

24-7540

Spore Print: pinkish-brown

Observation

Witch's Butter
Witch's Butter
Witch's Butter

Witch's Butter

Tremella mesenterica

Field Characteristics:

102 Growing gregariously down the length of fallen hardwood branch in low oak woodland area near creek. Some specimens were becoming liquified by something (presumably a slime mold)

Ceramic Parchment
Ceramic Parchment
Ceramic Parchment

Ceramic Parchment

Xylobolus frustulatus

Field Characteristics:

50

Growing from fallen red oak log Oak and hickory woodland in a ravine

Silky Rosegill
Silky Rosegill
Silky Rosegill

Silky Rosegill

Volvariella bombycina

The Silky Rosegill is a decomposer found a the base of dead trees but occasionally growing out of wounds of living trees. Widespread, but exceptionally common east of the Rocky Mountains. It can be found from late spring through fall.

The cap shape ranges from conical, to evenly rounded, to almost flat. The cap texture is slightly hairy.

Cap

It features free, pink gills, a brownish-pink spore print, and a sac-like volva at the base of the stem. Interestingly, it glows neon green on the stem under UV light.

UV

September 21, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park

  • Growing at the base of large Bitternut Hickory tree in low mixed oak/hickory woodland just above creek.
  • Cap planoconvex, dingy white color and adorned with dense short white hairs on pileipellis.
  • Lamellae pink, close, and free from stipe.
  • Stipe white emerging from a sac like volva.
  • Spore Print: light to pinkish-brown
  • UV: light green on stipe (forgot to test top of cap).
Spring Polypore
Spring Polypore
Spring Polypore

Spring Polypore

Lentinus arcularius

The Spring Polypore (Lentinus arcularius) is a spring-time polypore that can be found growing on fallen wood. It appears to be a generalist in its wood choices as has been found growing on Hophornbeam, Eastern Red Cedar, Oak, and Birch. It can be growing gregariously, clustered, or singularly. Quite common in woodland settings in the spring.

The cap has a central depression and is tan colored with brownish scales. The scales toward the cap margin can become pointy.

The hymenophore is composed of angular pores in a radial pattern. It extends down the stem (decurrent). The pores are whitish or cream-colored. The spore print is white.

The stem is darker colored than the cap with noticeable scales.

This mushroom has a tough, elastic consistency.

Dryad's Saddle
Dryad's Saddle
Dryad's Saddle

Dryad's Saddle

Cerioporus squamosus

Key features include:

  • Flattened scales (squamules) on the cap surface. A feature from which the mushroom gets its name C. squamosus.
  • Large, honeycomb-like pores under the cap that extend down the stem. The pore surface is not separatable from the cap.
  • The distinctive smell of watermelon rind.
  • White spore print.

This is a large and common mushroom in Nebraska. It's most noticable by its scales on the cap surface and the smell of watermelon rind. The cap color is pale tan to creamy yellowish with brown to black scales. When old, the cap color turns whitish with reddish to blackish scales sometimes with a dark brown to black patch in the center of the cap and black velvet extending from the base of the stem upwards. The cap shape is variable, but mostly semicircular to kidney-shaped to fan-shaped. The stem is generally tough and cork-like, especially with age. This species can get particularly large, generally a cap of 5-30 cm wide and 1-4 cm thick and stem 1-4 cm thick and 2-8 cm long.

Habitat

Dryad's Saddle can be found fruiting from decaying logs, stumps, and living trees on a wide variety of broadleaf trees (especially Silver Maple and Boxelder) in woodland settings, urban locations, and roadsides. It's known to be both saprobic and parasitic.

Abundance

Dryad's Saddle is the most commonly sighted mushroom in Nebraska, according to iNaturalist. It is generally found growing alone or in small groups.

Fruiting Period

This mushroom can be found fruiting from spring through fall. However, it prefers cooler weather and is most abundant in the spring and fall. This is a common mushroom to find while morel hunting. Although the mushroom is not perineal, its older forms can be found in the winter, slowly decomposing, making it discoverable year-round.

Similar Species

Edibility

This is a good edible mushroom when collected young in its small button stage. It's easy to determine edible parts, as they will be soft, pliable, and break apart by hand. With age, the mushroom becomes leathery and undesirable. Older specimens can be collected for the table by cutting the softer edges on the cap margin with a knife. All wild mushrooms should be cooked thoroughly before eating. Please see our disclaimer before eating any wild mushrooms.

Toxicity

This mushroom is not known to be toxic. However, allergies and sensitivities may affect individuals differently. Please use caution when eating any wild mushrooms.

Brown-haired White Cup
Brown-haired White Cup
Brown-haired White Cup

Brown-haired White Cup

Humaria hemisphaerica

Brown-haired White Cup (Humaria hemisphaerica) is a cup fungus that can be found in the summer and fall. It can be found growing in the soil or sometimes growing on fallen wood. It grows alone or in small groups and known to be mycorrhizal with hardwoods.

The outer cup is brownish-colored with noticeable hairs or "eye-lashes" toward the cup margin. It sometimes has a short stem, but otherwise grows without a stem.

An easy field characteristic is the color contrast between the outer and inner parts of the cup, which are brown and white.

It is brittle and usually reaches a width of 2-3 cm (3/4 - 1 1/4 inches).

Common Morel
Common Morel
Common Morel

Common Morel

Morchella americana

Also known as the White Morel.

  • Hollow mushroom, with the cap fused to the stem at the cap margin possessing rounded, irregularly arranged pits. 2-4 inches tall at maturity, sometimes much larger.
  • Cap shape: rounded, oval, or egg-shaped, cylindrical, or rounded triangular
  • Color: Cap gray with white ridges when young, becoming yellow-brown to brown with age. Stem white to light yellow with age.
  • Smell: reminiscent of Clorox.
  • Usually mycorrhizal (exchanging nutrients with plants), but sometimes fully saprobic (decomposing matter in the soil)

Habitat

Common Morels occur in sites ranging from deep-shaded forest ravines to open Bur Oak hilltop prairies to floodplain Cottonwood forests. It commonly grows near recently dead Elms and Cottonwoods, feeding on the recently deceased roots, but is found near many other tree species. It can be found growing alone or scattered. If one is found, others may be close by within eyesight.

Abundance & Fruiting Period

This spring-time mushroom appears in mid-April through May at Indian Cave. In northern Nebraska, it can still be found in mid-June. It may not appear in dry years.

Indian Cave State Park: Common and abundant. Especially abundant along Trail 9 near the overlook.

Statewide Range: Common throughout Nebraska in wooded habitats. (Distribution Map)

North America: Widespread. (Distribution Map)

Similar Species in Nebraska

  • The Half Free Morel (Morchella punctipes) fruits at similar times or soon after the Common Morel, but its cap is attached at the top and only extends halfway down the stem like a skirt if the mushroom is sliced lengthwise.
  • The giant morel is a later-fruiting and less common species that grows up to 8 inches tall and is a duller yellow color.
  • There are undoubtedly more species of Morels in the state that are less common.

Interesting facts

  • The name americana describes the region where it can be found and separates it from the European Yellow Morel (M. esculena).
  • Many mushroom hunters distinguish smaller, gray-colored morels as a separate species with the common name "Gray Morel". However, these individuals are Common Morels that are less mature (Kuo 2012).
  • This common morel is among our most delicious edible mushrooms and is pursued by many Nebraskans. It can be cooked in numerous ways. People have gotten sick from eating this species undercooked.
  • Native Americans used this species as a medical mushroom to treat whooping cough. Today, a compound from the mushroom is used to treat foot odor.
  • A morel species in northeastern North America (M. cryptica) can't be distinguished from the Common Morel without DNA testing.

Edibility and Toxicity

Choice edible (Kay, Sikes, & Morse, 2022).

Morels must be thoroughly cooked to be safely eaten! Poisonings from raw or undercooked morels are serious and have led to death (Demorest, 2024).

Lobster Mushroom
Lobster Mushroom
Lobster Mushroom

Lobster Mushroom

Hypomyces lactifluorum

The Lobster Mushroom (Hypomyces lactifluorum) is a parasite that infects other mushrooms generally within the genera Russula and Lactarius. It can be found in the summer through fall.

The host is infected at the time of fruiting body development, which changes the DNA expression of an otherwise white-colored, gilled mushroom into a contorted orange-pimpled form. The spore print is white. The spores are distinctly pointed on two ends.

An easy field test for this mushroom is to drop some dilute KOH on the flesh. It should result in dark purple.

Red False Morel
Red False Morel
Red False Morel

Red False Morel

Neogyromitra brunnea

Neogyromitra brunnea is a saprobic and mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found in spring-time forest settings under hardwoods. It can be found growing from the soil and well-decomposed stumps.

A field test for this mushroom is to slice it in half. If the inside is brain-like, the features lean more towards a False Morel like Neogyromitra rather than the True Morels (Morcella) which are hollow on the inside.

This mushroom should not be eaten. It contains a toxin call Gyromitrin that breaks down into what NASA uses as rocket fuel: monomethylhydrazine (MMH). It's highly toxic, carcinogenic, and easily evaporates into toxic fumes when cooking. Though some people still eat this mushroom as a delicacy, proper cooking requires a fume hood, many cycles of boiling and discarding water, and cultural experience to keep things safe.

Below are the effects of "Gyromitrin syndrome" defined by the North American Mycological Association:

"Symptoms appear within 2 to 24 hours and include headaches, abdominal distress, severe diarrhea, and vomiting. In severe cases, liver, kidney, and red blood cell damage may occur, possibly resulting in death. Treatment is largely supportive, and a physician should be consulted." (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Daldinia childiae
Daldinia childiae
Daldinia childiae

Daldinia childiae

Daldinia childiae is a decomposer of wood and is common in Nebraska. The fruiting times are spring through fall, though the tough fruiting bodies will overwinter and can be found year-round. Though mostly found on broadleaf trees it is sometimes found on conifers.

The fruiting body is mostly ball-shaped with an outer surface that is black or brown. When broke in half, the contents feature charcoal-like concentric zones of black and gray. When these contents are mixed with dilute KOH the resulting color is brownish which distinguishes it from the European Daldinia concentrica which produces purple with the same test.

Oak Curtain Crust Fungus
Oak Curtain Crust Fungus
Oak Curtain Crust Fungus

Oak Curtain Crust Fungus

Hymenochaete rubiginosa

The Oak Curtain Crust Fungus (Hymenochaete rubiginosa) is a common woodland crust fungi that can be found year-round on Oak. The fruiting body can grow as a crust or a shelf depending on what angle it is growing from its substrate.

The shelving caps feature concentric zones of color transitioning from black to brown from the cap attachment to margin. Sometimes the caps appear entirely black.

The hymenophore consists of microscopic pores too small to notice without a hand lens. The surface is rusty colored or tan, is bumpy, and can sometimes present a shiny iridescence.

A quick field test with dilute KOH or ammonia will turn it black on all surfaces.

Trembling Crust
Trembling Crust
Trembling Crust

Trembling Crust

Merulius tremellosus

The Trembling Crust (Merulius tremellosus) is a decomposer of wood and is usually found growing on the side of large fallen tree trunks. It fruits in the late spring through fall and overwinters as a dried up version of its former self.

The hymenophore features an array of patterns appearing wrinkled, pocketed, or angularly poriod with colors of red, pink, or purple. The spore print is white.

It can sometimes form a cap when angled appropriately alongside the tree, appearing as both a shelf and a crust (a form called effused-reflexed).

Bay Polypore
Bay Polypore
Bay Polypore

Bay Polypore

Picipes badius

The Bay Polypore (Picipes badius) is a saprobic mushroom that can be found on the deadwood of broadleaf trees. It fruits in the spring and fall.

The cap color is tanish when young, becoming brown, then reddish-brown. The color is most vibrant towards the center of the cap. The cap is generally shaped with a deep depression, becoming funnel-shaped.

The hymenophore consists of tiny, irregularly placed pores. Colored white when young, becoming cream-colored with age.

This mushroom is also called the "Black Footed Polypore" due to its black stem base developed with age.

Prismatic Wavy Cup
Prismatic Wavy Cup
Prismatic Wavy Cup

Prismatic Wavy Cup

Chlorencoelia torta

The Prismatic Wavy Cup (Chlorencoelia torta) is a decomposer of wood that can be found from July to mid-October growing on a wide variety of tree species. Generally found on well-decayed, barkless logs in central to north-eastern North America. The featured specimen was found on presumed American Linden.

The Prismatic Wavy Cup features a wide variety of unusual color transitions, from blue, to yellow, to olive-green, brown, and even orange. It can be found growing solidarity, in groups, and sometimes multiple cups growing from the same stem (caespitose). Fruiting bodies grow as a cup when young, later transitioning into a flattened disc with a wavy margin. This feature is how it gets its species name torta, meaning twisted or contorted (Dixon, 1975).

Jelly Babies
Jelly Babies
Jelly Babies

Jelly Babies

Leotia lubrica

Jelly Babies (Leotia lubrica) can be found in soil around broadleaf trees or conifers, but sometimes on decomposing wood. The season ranges from late spring through fall. It is also known as "Ochre Jelly Club".

White Saddle
White Saddle
White Saddle

White Saddle

Helvella crispa

The White Saddle is a presumed mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found on soil or well-rotted wood in the spring to summer months. It can be found growing alone or in groups under deciduous and conifer trees.

The cap is generally saddle-shaped, but does present more chaotic shapes as the mushroom grows and folds on itself. The stem is ribbed, tough, and occasionally with tiny holes. The saddle portion is a spore-producing surface. The spore print is white.

Tapioca Club
Tapioca Club
Tapioca Club

Tapioca Club

Holwaya mucida

The Tapioca Club (Holwaya mucida) is a decomposer of wood and fruits in the fall. At Indian Cave State Park, it has found in great numbers (hundreds to thousands) between the bark fissures of fallen American Linden trunks (Tilia americana). It features a black club form with a cream-colored, tapioca pudding-like apex which is easily rubbed off when fresh. The apex later turns gray-colored and crusty with age. The species shape is polymorphic and can also be found in a black cup form amidst the clubs (not pictured).

Half-free Morel
Half-free Morel
Half-free Morel

Half-free Morel

Morchella punctipes

  • This mushroom is hollow on the inside, brittle, and thin-fleshed. The inside texture is roughened.
  • The cap is skirt-like, meaning that the bottom margin is halfway free from the stem and fused to the stem for the upper half. This feature separates it from other Morels in Nebraska.
  • The cap shape is conic (cone-shaped), round, or oval when young, becoming mostly conic with age.
  • The stem has an obvious rough, granular texture that rubs off and the color is white to light yellow
  • When young, the mushroom's cap is generally taller than the stem. With age, the stem becomes significantly taller than the cap.
  • The cap is composed of pits and ridges mostly tan colored when young. In mature specimens, the pits are yellowish-brown to brown to gray-brown and the ridges are darker than the pits. The ridges turn black with age. The ridges are mostly vertically oriented with occasional horizontal ribs.
  • This mushroom is saprobic and mycorrhizal.

Habitat

Half-Free Morels occur in sites ranging from deep-shaded forest ravines to open Bur Oak hilltop prairies to floodplain Cottonwood forests. It commonly grows near recently dead Elms and Cottonwoods, feeding on the recently deceased roots, but is found near many other tree species. It can be found growing alone or scattered. If one is found, others may be close by within eyesight.

Abundance & Fruiting Period

This spring-time mushroom appears in mid-April through May at Indian Cave. In northern Nebraska, it can still be found in mid-June.

Statewide Range: Found in eastern Nebraska in wooded habitats, possibly found throughout the state. (Distribution Map)

North America: Found throughout central to northeastern North America. (Distribution Map)

This spring-time mushroom appears in mid-April through May at Indian Cave. In northern Nebraska, it can still be found in mid-June. It may not appear in dry years.

Similar Species in Nebraska

Interesting facts

  • punct-ipes means "spotted stem".
  • This mushroom was once called M. semilibera in North America as the European version until DNA testing showed that the North American version was a distinct species.

Edibility and Toxicity

Edible, but taste not as exciting as other morels (Kay, Sikes, & Morse, 2022).

Morels must be thoroughly cooked to be safely eaten! Poisonings from raw or undercooked morels are serious and have led to death (Demorest, 2024).

Dudley's Elf Cup
Dudley's Elf Cup
Dudley's Elf Cup

Dudley's Elf Cup

Sarcoscypha dudleyi

Dudley's Elf Cup (Sarcoscypha dudleyi) is a decomposer that can be found in the spring and fall. It grows on twigs and branches submerged in soil and duff in wooded areas and is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains in North America.

Sarcoscypha dudleyi is scarlet colored (neon reddish-orange) on top and a lighter color on the bottom of its disc. It is uncommon in comparison to other Elf Cups and is most easily distinguished from the others by its "clam-shape" when young. It sometimes flattens with age.

Hypoxylon Canker
Hypoxylon Canker
Hypoxylon Canker

Hypoxylon Canker

Biscogniauxia atropunctata

Hypoxylon Canker (Biscogniauxia atropunctata) is a crust that grows on Oak and can be found year-round.

Stalked Scarlet Cup
Stalked Scarlet Cup
Stalked Scarlet Cup

Stalked Scarlet Cup

Sarcoscypha occidentalis

The Stalked Elf Cup (Sarcoscypha occidentalis) is a decomposer of deciduous twigs and duff (sometimes submerged in soil) and can be found in the spring through summer. It can be found east of the Rocky Mountains in North America through Mexico.

The Sarcoscypha occidentalis group can be distinguished from other Sarcoscypha by the presence of a stem. North America may see the group split into several distinct species in the coming decades, as DNA testing suggests that Sarcoscypha occidentalis-IN03 could be a different species than others in the group. The fruiting body is saucer-shaped, scarlet colored on top and whitish on the bottom (the scarlet color shows through creating a muted scarlet effect). The stem is white, with cottony basal mycelial threads commonly present.

Snow Fungus
Snow Fungus
Snow Fungus

Snow Fungus

Tremella fuciformis

The Snow Fungus (Tremella fuciformis) is a jelly fungus that grows on hardwood logs after heavy rains. It fruits from the summer through fall. It can sometimes become parasitized by Sporothrix epigloea.

Sporothrix epigloea
Sporothrix epigloea
Sporothrix epigloea

Sporothrix epigloea

Sporothrix epigloea is a tiny parasite that grows on Snow Fungus (Tremella fuciformis) and can be found in the fall. It features tiny pointed clubs that can be difficult to see to the naked eye.

Ergots
Ergots
Ergots

Ergots

Claviceps sp.

Claviceps species grow on grass seeds in the summer and fall. It can be found after times of heavy rain during grass seed development. The visible black part is a sclerotium which is fungal growth that serves as energy reserves for the fungus. Like a "fungal potato".

Claviceps is highly poisonous. The resulting poisoning syndrome is known as ergotism and has also been named "St. Anthony's Fire" and "Devil's Curse".

"Convulsions, muscle spasms, vomiting, hallucinations, and a gangrenous pain where the victim’s limbs, fingers, toes, and nose were “eaten up by the holy fire that blackened like charcoal” characterize ergot poisoning. Victims often lost parts of their extremities or entire limbs due to blood vessel constriction associated with gangrenous ergotism." (U.S. Forest Service)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild fungi, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Pink Fringed Faery Cup
Pink Fringed Faery Cup
Pink Fringed Faery Cup

Pink Fringed Faery Cup

Microstoma floccosum

The Pink Fringed Faery Cup (Microstoma floccosum) is a cup fungus that can be found in the summer growing from partially submerged fallen wood. It has a pink cup or goblet shape on the end of a long white stem. It is covered in long hairs that join into pointed bundles. The hairs are prominent towards the margin of the cup.

Beauveria brongniartii
Beauveria brongniartii
Beauveria brongniartii

Beauveria brongniartii

Kerrigan's Champion
Kerrigan's Champion
Kerrigan's Champion

Kerrigan's Champion

Agaricus kerriganii

Kerrigan's Champion (Agaricus kerriganii) is a brown-spored gilled mushroom that grows in soil in wooded habitats. It can be found from late summer to early fall in Oak and Pine forests. It has a skirt on the stem without a cup at the stem base. It bruises yellow.

Morphology

  • Cap shape evenly rounded to half-sphere, later becoming flat to centrally depressed with age. 1.5-2.5 inches (4-6 cm) wide.
  • Texture smooth and dry. Ornamentation can be silky to scaly. Grayish brown becoming more brown towards the center of the cap.
  • The gills are free from the stem. The gill color is light pink when young, becoming darker pink, then becoming brown with age. This is due to brown spores maturing on the gill surface over time.
  • Stem with a membranous skirt on the top half and a bulb on the base. Sometimes curved. 1.2-2 inches (3-5 cm) long.
  • Bruising yellow where handled. Bruising red with age and decomposition.
  • Spore print brown.
Slinder-Stemmed Champion
Slinder-Stemmed Champion
Slinder-Stemmed Champion

Slinder-Stemmed Champion

Agaricus leptocaulis

The Slinder-Stemmed Champion (Agaricus leptocaulis) is a decomposer that can be found in soil in mixed woods from late summer to early fall. It has been reported in the Midwest to the East Coast. It can be found growing alone or in small groups. The cap and stem bruise yellow where handled.

Morphology

The cap shape is evenly rounded to broadly rounded, becoming flat with age. Sometimes with a slight umbo. Sometimes splitting radially at the margin. The cap texture is smooth and dry. The color is grayish-brown with brown scales that are more densely collected at the center than the margin.

The gills are free from the stem. The gill color is light pink when young, becoming darker pink, then becoming brown with age. This is due to brown spores maturing on the gill surface over time.

The stem features an elastic pendant-shaped skirt on the top half and a small bulb on the base. Sometimes curved. 1.5-4.5 inches long (3.5-11.5 cm) × 0.3-0.5 inches wide (8-14 mm).

The odor ranges from indistinct to pleasant to phenolic (like band-aids or glue). The spore print is brown.

Flat-Top Champion
Flat-Top Champion
Flat-Top Champion

Flat-Top Champion

Agaricus placomyces

The Flat-Top Champion (Agaricus placomyces) is a decomposer that can be found in soil from summer through fall. It can be found in mixed woods. This species of Agaricus grow quite large and mature caps can be flat (plane) with a darker-colored center. The gills start pinkish colored and turn to dark brown with age. It has a brown spore print.

Hypercheeto
Hypercheeto
Hypercheeto

Hypercheeto

Polycephalomycetaceae sp.

This is a parasitic fungus that attacks parasitic fungi. Yes, you read that right. This is a parasite on top of another parasite. This is a phenomenon known has 'hyperparasitism'. The host of this hyperparasite is Ophiocordyceps variabilis. It is presumed by some mycologists that hyperparasites are quite common, but rarely observed.

This specimen is new to science confirmed by its DNA results and has yet to be formally described.

Moth Urchin Fungus
Moth Urchin Fungus
Moth Urchin Fungus

Moth Urchin Fungus

Akanthomyces aculeatus

The Moth Urchin Fungus (Akanthomyces aculeatus) is a fungus that parasitizes and consumes adult moths. The mycelium creates a thick mat that encompasses the moth and sometimes adheres to adjacent surfaces. It can be found in the summer through fall in moist habitats. As the fungus grows, spear-shaped spikes protrude outward making it look like a sea urchin. The clubs produce spores in order to infect more insects. Spooky!

Spider Akanthomyces
Spider Akanthomyces
Spider Akanthomyces

Spider Akanthomyces

Akanthomyces aranearum

The Spider Akanthomyces (Akanthomyces aranearum) is an entomopathogenic mushroom that can be found in the summer. Its preferred hosts are spiders and can be found in riparian areas.

This fungus is not found often because of its tiny size, making it not well understood. However, as North American mycology matures in the next decades we hope to understand more about this interesting organism. The name "aranearum" stands for "of the spiders". It refers to the order of true spiders, Araneae, which is the host of choice for this fungal parasite.

Icing Sugar Fungus
Icing Sugar Fungus
Icing Sugar Fungus

Icing Sugar Fungus

Beauveria bassiana

The Icing Sugar Fungus (Beauveria bassiana) is a widespread insect pathogen that can be found year-round infecting various species of hosts. The fungi erupt out of the joints of the insect exoskeleton as a white, powdery mass full of reproductive spores. This species infects a wide range of arthropod species. It has been used as a natural insecticide to combat a wide range of insects.

In many Ascomycetes, species can have multiple life stages. A stage where they make asexual spores via mitosis (anamorphic phase) and a life stage where they make sexual spores via meiosis (teleomorphic phase). Beauveria species are an anamorph for matching Cordyceps teleomorph. Past mycological convention was to separate these two forms into different species (like Beauveria and Cordyceps), and modern convention is to group them into one species. In the future, we may see the genus Beauveria disappear in favor of their respective teleomorphic Cordyceps species.

Slinder-Footed Cordyceps
Slinder-Footed Cordyceps
Slinder-Footed Cordyceps

Slinder-Footed Cordyceps

Cordyceps tenuipes

The Slinder-Footed Cordyceps (Cordyceps tenuipes) is an entomopathogenic mushroom that grows on cocooned month and butterfly pupae in the order Lepidoptera. The fruiting bodies grow in damp, shady wooded areas in the summer. It can be found eastern North America and can also be found in Mexico, China, and Australia.

The host is sometimes rolled up in a leaf on the forest floor to pupate. The fungus infects the pupa, consumes its body, then grows spore-producing structures (stroma) with white powdery tips out of the leaf "burrito". These fruiting bodies offer a noticeable neon-yellow white color contrast amidst the dark leaf duff for keen-eyed mushroom hunters.

Cheeto Cordyceps
Cheeto Cordyceps
Cheeto Cordyceps

Cheeto Cordyceps

Ophiocordyceps variabilis

Green-spored Parasol
Green-spored Parasol
Green-spored Parasol

Green-spored Parasol

Chlorophyllum molybdites

The Green-spored Parasol (Chlorophyllum molybdites) is a widespread mushroom that can be found in lawns and fields from summer through fall. It sometimes fruits in fairy rings. This is a poisonous mushroom that is commonly misidentified as an edible species of Macrolepiota.

The Green-spored Parasol is the main source of poisoning in Nebraska. Although generally not deadly, it can cause severe gastrointestinal upset along with an uncomfortable hospital visit.

The main separating features of this species are free gills and an olive-green spore print. The gills will be greenish at maturity.

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Fool's Funnel
Fool's Funnel
Fool's Funnel

Fool's Funnel

Collybia 'rivulosa PNW07'

Fool's Funnel (Collybia 'rivulosa PNW07', also known as Clitocybe rivulosa) is a decomposer that can be found in the late summer through fall and seems to have a global distribution. Its habit is to grow in arcs and rings in grasslands. It is relatively common and is a toxic look-alike of the Fairy Ring Mushroom (Marasmius oreades). The latter being an edible mushroom inhabiting the same habitat and growth habit (Wood, 2015).

Form

This mushroom contains a toxin called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Hymenophore

August 9th, 2023 Field Notes - Indian Cave State Park:

Growing gregariously to clustered in a hemispherical fairy ring (only fruiting 1/4 of ring) in an open grassy area bordering an oak/hickory woodland. The mycelium ring is estimated to be 7 feet in diameter. Local trees: Ash, American Hop Hornbeam

  • Growing 1-2 cm tall; 1.5-3 cm cap diameter.
  • Gills: decurrent; cream-colored; partial gills present.
  • Cap: convex to flattening, both with central depression. Cream to tan colored. Margin inrolled and undulating.
  • Stipe: flexible; brushing lightly where handled; darkening at base;longitudinal striations; pink notes at base.
  • Smell: indistinct to faintly fruity
  • Taste: faint and slightly acrid.
  • KOH: pileipellis: darkens surface
  • Ammonia: pileipellis: indistinct.
  • Not exuding latex.
  • Spore Print: white

Observation

Dung-Loving Bolbitius
Dung-Loving Bolbitius
Dung-Loving Bolbitius

Dung-Loving Bolbitius

Bolbitius coprophilus

The Dung-Loving Bolbitius (Bolbitius coprophilus) is a widespread gilled mushroom that grows on... (you guessed it) dung! It can also be found on compost, and other nitrogen-rich organic substrates. It grows alone or in groups (singular or gregarious). Its gills are slightly attached to the stem (acutely adnexed). B. coprophilus has a brownish spore print (dull cinnamon brown).

Viscid Bolbitius
Viscid Bolbitius
Viscid Bolbitius

Viscid Bolbitius

Bolbitius viscosus

The Viscid Bolbitius (Bolbitius viscosus) is a small mushroom that grows on dead broadleaf trees. It can be found in spring through fall. Its cap width is generally no larger than 3/4 inch (2 cm). Cap surface colors range from gray-olive, to red, orange, and brown.

The cap surface can be slimy to tacky, so much so that it can literally stick to your hands. Its gills are attached to or pulling away from the stem. It has a cinnamon-brown spore print.

Pale Brittlestem
Pale Brittlestem
Pale Brittlestem

Pale Brittlestem

Candolleomyces candolleanus

The Pale Brittlestem (Candolleomyces candolleanus) is a decomposer that can be found in the spring through fall. It can be found in lawns, mulch, and forests where it decomposes dead trees and their root systems. It is widely distributed and common.

The cap is brittle and is colored yellowish to tan when young, generally becoming lighter and whiter with age. The shape is evenly rounded becoming broadly conical with age, almost like a large umbrella. The gills are slightly attached (adnexed) and are white when young becoming grayish-pink then brownish-black with age. The stem is hollow and brittle. The spores are brownish-black.

Milky Conecap
Milky Conecap
Milky Conecap

Milky Conecap

Conocybe apala

The Milky Conecap (Conocybe apala) is a decomposer that is common in lawns during the summer and fall months but can also be found in dung, compost, and woodchips. Widespread and common.

Conocybe can be distinguished by a cone-shaped cap, brown spores, and shallow gills. Although this species isn't known to be poisonous, other species in the genus can be deadly, so it's best to consider this species poisonous as well.

Hesler's Webcap
Hesler's Webcap
Hesler's Webcap

Hesler's Webcap

Cortinarius hesleri

Trooping Crumble Cap
Trooping Crumble Cap
Trooping Crumble Cap

Trooping Crumble Cap

Coprinellus disseminatus

The Trooping Crumble Cap (Coprinellus disseminatus) is a distinctive Ink Cap mushroom that can be found in soil or on decomposing wood. It is widespread and can be found in spring, summer, and fall. This mushroom is small, is quite fragile, does not transform into black ink (unlike most other Ink Caps), and is usually found in large groups (trooping).

The cap is pleated/grooved from the margin almost to the center. The gills start white when young, becoming gray-brown, then becoming black with maturity. The spore print is black. Attachments range from free, attached, or pulling away from the stem.

Scaly Ink Cap
Scaly Ink Cap
Scaly Ink Cap

Scaly Ink Cap

Coprinopsis variegata

The Scaly Ink Cap (Coprinopsis variegata) is a decomposer that can be found in the spring and fall (occasionally in the summer). It is widely distributed and common in North America and can fruit in substantial numbers. It grows on wood and can appear like it is growing from the soil, though it is actually originating roots underground. It is widespread and common.

The mushroom originates from an egg-shaped button stage. As it grows, it splits the veil open leaving bits of split tissue on the cap surface and remnants of the veil on the stem near the base. The gill color starts whitish, becoming black at maturity.

This mushroom will digest itself through a phenomenon called deliquescence or "the process of turning into a liquid". The inky mess is loaded with spores. Flies and other insects are attracted to it and get covered in the ink, which later disperse the spores by traveling to other areas. This is an amazing example of how mushrooms hack the behaviors of other organisms to complete their lifecycles and spread to new territories.

Discrete Birds Nest Fungus
Discrete Birds Nest Fungus
Discrete Birds Nest Fungus

Discrete Birds Nest Fungus

Crucibulum parvulum

This bizarre decomposer is composed of a nest-like structure containing disc-like eggs, which are small spore sacks. This fungus has an interesting method of spore dispersal. The nest is structured so that it may catch falling raindrops which splash the eggs to other locations to seed future mycelium.

Crucibulum parvulum can be found growing on twigs, woodchips, and roots east of the Rocky Mountains from summer through fall.

The Discrete Birds Nest is considered a smaller version of the Common Birds Nest (Crucibulum laeve). The former is described with a nest 1.5-3mm wide and the latter 4-10mm wide. Interestingly enough, this specimen seems to be bigger than described, but the DNA results matched Crucibulum parvulum... It seems that DNA testing might be necessary to accurately separate the two species.

Sweet-Smelling Fibercap
Sweet-Smelling Fibercap
Sweet-Smelling Fibercap

Sweet-Smelling Fibercap

Inocybe dulciolens

The Sweet-Smelling Fibercap (Inocybe dulciolens) is a mycorrhizal mushroom that can be found from summer through fall. It is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains and generally associates with deciduous trees in soils that are high in calcium carbonate. Occasionally fruiting in large numbers.

The species name dulciolens means "sweet-smelling" representing its sweet and spicy smell.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Inocybe sp-IN02
Inocybe sp-IN02
Inocybe sp-IN02

Inocybe sp-IN02

2024 DNA results of Inocybe sp-IN02 represent it as an undescribed species originally sequenced in Indiana. It is currently using the cryptic name "sp-IN02" until it can be formally described.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Inocybe sp-IN21
Inocybe sp-IN21
Inocybe sp-IN21

Inocybe sp-IN21

2024 DNA results of Inocybe sp-IN21 represent it as an undescribed species originally found in Indiana.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Inocybe sp-IN19
Inocybe sp-IN19
Inocybe sp-IN19

Inocybe sp-IN19

2024 DNA results of Inocybe sp-IN19 represent it as an undescribed species originally found in Indiana.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Inocybe sp-IN49
Inocybe sp-IN49
Inocybe sp-IN49

Inocybe sp-IN49

2024 DNA results of Inocybe sp-IN49 represent it as an undescribed species originally found in Indiana.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Inocybe sp-NE01
Inocybe sp-NE01
Inocybe sp-NE01

Inocybe sp-NE01

2024 DNA results of Inocybe sp-NE01 represent it as a new, undescribed species from Nebraska Oak/Hickory forests.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Inocybe sp-NE02

Inocybe sp-NE02

2024 DNA results of Inocybe sp-NE02 represent it as a new, undescribed species from Nebraska Oak/Hickory forests.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Purple-and-white Deceiver
Purple-and-white Deceiver
Purple-and-white Deceiver

Purple-and-white Deceiver

Laccaria ochropurpurea

Inocybe velicopia
Inocybe velicopia
Inocybe velicopia

Inocybe velicopia

Inocybe velicopia is a mycorrhizal mushroom that associates with Oak, Hickory, Beech, and Chestnut trees and can be found in the summer and fall. It is distributed east of the Rocky Mountains and Costa Rica.

Members of these genus are known to be toxic. The toxin in question called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Pantropic Mottlegill
Pantropic Mottlegill
Pantropic Mottlegill

Pantropic Mottlegill

Panaeolus pantropicalis

The Pantropic Mottlegill (Panaeolus pantropicalis) is a dung decomposer that has a wide distribution across the world, though it has mostly been recorded in Florida. In Nebraska, it can be found fruiting on horse or bovine dung in the summer.

Antilles Mottlegill
Antilles Mottlegill
Antilles Mottlegill

Antilles Mottlegill

Panaeolus antillarum

The Antilles Mottlegill (Panaeolus antillarum) is a widely distributed dung decomposer that can be found in the spring through fall. It can be found on a wide variety of herbivore dung, from those of horses, cows, buffalo, and elephant to name a few. The name is associated with where it was first described: in the Antilles archipelago bordered by the Caribbean Sea.

The cap is evenly rounded to bullet-shaped to bell-shaped, and colored gray to brown to white. The gills are distinctively "mottled" (two toned speckled, like granite stone), gray when young becoming black with age, and attached to the stem. The spore print is black. The stem has a constant width (even) has no annulus nor a volva.

Wooly Brittlestem
Wooly Brittlestem
Wooly Brittlestem

Wooly Brittlestem

Psathyrella vinosofulva

The Wooly Brittlestem (Psathyrella vinosofulva) is an uncommon decomposer of woody debris and can be found in the spring and summer. It enjoys growing on soil amongst well-decomposed wood (especially ash), distributed (but uncommon) across the Northern Hemisphere. These specimens were found in a low, shaded woody area adjacent to a creek.

Psathyrella vinosofulva resembles the more common Maroon Brittlestem except for its cap color is brighter reddish to brownish, is more slender, and possesses a great deal more wooly velar tissue on the top of the cap. The cap is shaped evenly rounded, sometimes with a small umbo in the center ornamented with distinctive wool-like groups of fibers that wear off with age. The gills are attached to the stem and not crowded. The stem is exceptionally brittle with no annulus but sometimes wooly velar tissue at the base (similar to that on cap surface). It has a blackish spore print.

Maroon Brittlestem
Maroon Brittlestem
Maroon Brittlestem

Maroon Brittlestem

Psathyrella bipellis

The Maroon Brittlestem (Psathyrella bipellis) is a decomposer of woody debris in wood and gardens that can be found in the spring through summer. It is widespread across North America. This specimen was found in a deep woodland valley with a great deal of woody debris.

The cap is purple, red, to maroon colored when young drying brownish with age. A drop of KOH/Drano on the cap should result in an instant dark gray reaction. Small bits of velar tissue can be found on the cap margin. The cap breaks with ease into pizza-slice-shaped radial sections.

The gills are attached to the stem, purplish when young becoming dark purplish brown to dark gray with age. The gill edges are whitish. The stem is exceptionally brittle (hence its name) with visible fibers. It does not have an annulus nor a volva. The spore print is purplish brown to purplish black.

Devil's Urn
Devil's Urn
Devil's Urn

Devil's Urn

Urnula craterium

The Devil's Urn (Urnula craterium) is a decomposer of buried twigs and logs that can be found in the spring in woodland settings. It's dark-colored, urn-shaped, and generally grows in clusters.

Scaber Stem Fieldcap
Scaber Stem Fieldcap
Scaber Stem Fieldcap

Scaber Stem Fieldcap

Agrocybe firma

The Scaber Stem Agrocybe (Agrocybe firma) is a decomposer that grows on dead hardwood logs in wooded areas and can be found summer through fall. It is mostly distributed west of the Great Plains.

It has a dark, firm cap without lines at the margin. Gills that are narrowly attached to the stem that start white-colored then turn dull brown. The stem is distinctly ornamented with scale-like tufts of white fibrils that turn brown with age. Annulus and volva are absent. It can be found fruiting in clusters or, rarely, alone.

Wrinkled Fieldcap
Wrinkled Fieldcap
Wrinkled Fieldcap

Wrinkled Fieldcap

Agrocybe rivulosa

The Wrinkled Fieldcap (Agrocybe rivulosa) is a brown-spored, gilled decomposer that grows in soil in woodland settings.

It has a wrinkled cap top surface that is mostly white becoming tan towards the center. The stem is relatively long, has a ring (annulus), and has an abrupt bulb at the base with white "roots" (pseudorhizomorphs). The gills are slightly attached to the stem and begin light-colored and turn more brown with maturity.

Pholiota polychroa
Pholiota polychroa
Pholiota polychroa

Pholiota polychroa

Hesler's Lute
Hesler's Lute
Hesler's Lute

Hesler's Lute

Callistosporium hesleri

Hesler's Lute (Callistosporium hesleri) is an exceptionally rare mushroom. It was first collected and described in 1983, and wasn't found again until a soil DNA study found the mycelium in a Pine plantation in South Carolina in 2014. As of August 2024, has been found a total of three times on iNaturalist, twice in Indiana and once in Nebraska.

Hesler's Lute grows on soil and decayed wood and can be found spring through late summer. It is a small, agaric with distant, notched, gray-colored gills. Not much is known about this mushroom due to its rarity.

Purple-edged Lute
Purple-edged Lute
Purple-edged Lute

Purple-edged Lute

Callistosporium purpureomarginatum

The Purple-edged Lute (Callistosporium purpureomarginatum) is a decomposer of fallen Oak wood and can be found widespread in eastern North America from mid-July to mid-September.

When found fresh and well hydrated, this mushroom's color is pronounced purplish red. A distinctive feature of the cap is that the cap margin maintains a dark reddish violet color as it dries out while the rest of it changes color. It starts dark red or grayish reddish brown when moist the center starts to dry out to grayish yellow and later dries to light yellowish brown.

Cap center:

When Moist
Dark Red
#722F37
Grayish Reddish Brown
#674C47
Drying to
Grayish Yellow
#C2B280
Further drying to
Light Yellowish Brown
#C19A6B

Cap margin:

When Moist
Dark Red
#722F37
Drying to
Dark Red
#722F37

The gill attachment to the stem is directly connected to the intersection point (adnexed) or with a notch (emarginate) usually with a decurrent tooth running down the stem. The gills are fragile, especially toward the cap margin. The gill color is yellow or purple undertones and purple towards the cap margin. A color difference can be noticed on the gill margins (marginate) which is a more pronounced purple.

The stem is usually attached off-center to the cap (eccentric) and is usually curved. Usually the same color as the gill margins (concolorous) drying into similar colors as the cap with age.

The spore print is white. The odor is pleasant, but nondescriptive. The taste is slightly bitter with a metallic aftertaste (please spit it out after tasting). The name purpureomarginatum refers to the purple margins of the cap and gills as the mushroom dries out.

Blewit
Blewit
Blewit

Blewit

Collybia nuda

Fool's Funnel
Fool's Funnel
Fool's Funnel

Fool's Funnel

Collybia rivulosa

The Fool's Funnel (Collybia 'rivulosa PNW07', also known as Clitocybe rivulosa) is a decomposer that can be found in the late summer through fall and seems to have a global distribution. Its habit is to grow in arcs and rings in grasslands. It is relatively common and is a toxic look-alike of the Fairy Ring Mushroom (Marasmius oreades). The latter being an edible mushroom inhabiting the same habitat and growth habit (Wood, 2015).

This mushroom contains a toxin called muscarine. Please review the list of symptoms below.

The symptoms usually occur within 15-30 minutes of ingestion, and are focused on the involuntary nervous system. They include excessive salivation, sweating, tears, lactation (in pregnant women), plus severe vomiting and diarrhea. These symptoms may be accompanied by visual disturbances, irregular pulse, decreased blood pressure, and difficulty breathing. Victims normally recover within 24 hours, but severe cases may result in death due to respiratory failure. Atropine is a specific antidote, but must be administered by a physician. Dogs are particularly susceptible to the toxin muscarine. (Beug, 2024)

If you or someone you know has been poisoned by consuming wild mushrooms, call 9-1-1 and get the individual medical attention IMMEDIATELY. Afterwards, please report poisonings to the North American Mycological Association to contribute to our understanding of wild mushroom safety.

Bitter Waxcap
Bitter Waxcap
Bitter Waxcap

Bitter Waxcap

Hygrocybe mucronella

The Bitter Waxcap (Hygrocybe mucronella) can be found in grasslands and wooded areas summer through fall. The featured specimen was found growing a few inches in the entrances of small holes presumably dug by small animals. It can be found in eastern North America and Europe.

Small-Spored Sunset Waxycap
Small-Spored Sunset Waxycap
Small-Spored Sunset Waxycap

Small-Spored Sunset Waxycap

Hygrocybe acutoconica var. microspora

The Small-Spored Sunset Waxycap (Hygrocybe acutoconica var. microspora) is a mushroom with an undetermined ecological role. It's uncertain if it is a decomposer, mycorrhizal, or some other type of mushroom. This mushroom can be found late sprint through fall under Oak and other deciduous trees. Hygrocybe acutoconica is widespread in North America but H. acutoconica var. microspora has only been found east of the Rocky Mountains and is differentiated by its more slimy cap surface and smaller spores. H. acutoconica was originally described from northeast Nebraska in the early 1900s.

The cap is conical to umbonate to flat, slimy to tacky, with colors ranging from yellow to orange to red. It does not bruise black some some other Hygrocybe sp.. The gills are free from the stem or narrowly attached to it, are yellowish or orangish, and have a slightly waxy texture. It does not have an annulus nor a volva. The spore print is white.

Brown Goblet
Brown Goblet
Brown Goblet

Brown Goblet

Arrhenia epichysium

The Brown Goblet (Arrhenia epichysium) is a gilled mushroom that can be found on dead logs with moss spring through fall. It has a "belly-button" shaped cap that starts blackish or gray-brown and fades with age and is 1/2-2 inches (1.5-5 cm) wide. Its gills run down the stem (decurrent) and are light-colored. It has white spores.

Giant Puffball
Giant Puffball
Giant Puffball

Giant Puffball

Calvatia gigantea

Pear-shaped Puffball
Pear-shaped Puffball
Pear-shaped Puffball

Pear-shaped Puffball

Apioperdon pyriforme

The Pear-shaped Puffball (Apioperdon pyriforme) is a decomposer of wood and can be found from the fall through the early winter. It can be recognized by its gregarious growth habit (growing in groups) and numerous mycelium ropes growing through the wood (rhizomorphs).

When young, the "pear-shaped" fruiting bodies have a white-colored interior that later turns brown with age. They split open at a single pore on the top of fruiting body from which they disperse their spores via wind, rain, and other disturbances. The spore print is brown.

Purple-spored Puffball
Purple-spored Puffball
Purple-spored Puffball

Purple-spored Puffball

Calvatia cyathiformis

The Purple-spored Puffball (Calvatia cyathiformis) is a grassland decomposer that can be found in summer through fall. It is a common mushroom widely distributed across the globe. It can be found alone, in groups, or in fairy rings.

Calvatia cyathiformis is generally pear-shaped to loaf-shaped. The exterior can be colored white to tan to brown and develops a "mud-cracked" pattern after being exposed to the sun. The interior begins white when young, transitioning to a purplish color towards the top and olive at the base when mature.

Common Coral Slime
Common Coral Slime
Common Coral Slime

Common Coral Slime

Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa

Lilac Oysterling
Lilac Oysterling
Lilac Oysterling

Lilac Oysterling

Panus conchatus

The Lilac Oysterling (Panus conchatus) is a common decomposer of wood and can be found in the spring through the fall. It is commonly growing on fallen sticks. It can be recognized it tough consistency, purple margin, and by the presence of gills (though more closely related to polypores rather than "true" agarics).

The cap is smooth to slightly hairy, with a central depression or vase-shaped, with concentric zones of color from the center to the margin (a ripple effect). The gills are decurrent and are whitish, yellowish, or purplish when young, becoming brownish with age. The spore print is white.

Red Raspberry Slime Mold
Red Raspberry Slime Mold
Red Raspberry Slime Mold

Red Raspberry Slime Mold

Tubifera ferruginosa

The Red Raspberry Slime Mold (Tubifera ferruginosa) is a slime mold that can be found growing on well-decomposed wood often covered with bryophytes (small moss-like plants). On closer inspection, the individual "clubs" are shaped like an egg or water droplets and can be found growing alone or in larger groups. It starts a pinkish orange color and later fades to gold then to black with age.

Tubifera ferruginosa is not a true fungus, but rather a slime mold. Slime molds are different from fungi in how they live their lives. Most mushroom producing fungi are composed of tiny threads, whereas slime molds start their lives as individual single-celled organisms that join together to make larger reproductive groups.

Brittle Cinder
Brittle Cinder
Brittle Cinder

Brittle Cinder

Kretzschmaria deusta

Brittle Cinder (Kretzschmaria deusta) is a decomposer of wood that can be found in the spring through fall. It has a spring and a summer form. The spring form is white or gray with a white margin and the summer form is black and bumpy. It can be found growing alone or in groups at the base of trees along fallen logs.

Orange Faint Foot Mushroom
Orange Faint Foot Mushroom
Orange Faint Foot Mushroom

Orange Faint Foot Mushroom

Heimiomyces tenuipes

The Orange Faint Foot Mushroom (Heimiomyces tenuipes) is a decomposer of dead wood and duff and can be found in the late-spring through early-summer. It is common in hardwood forests.

The fruiting body has a tough consistency and has a "felty" texture. The gills commonly possess cross-veins at the base of the gills. The gills are notched as they attach to the stem. The spore print is white.

Nebraska Mushrooms is a collaboration of wildlife and educational groups promoting fungal education, recreation, and conservation in Nebraska.

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