What do you see here?
![]() |
| Large, gilled mushroom, yellow coral fungus, fly, moth, harvestman, duff. |
When I loaded this photo to iNaturalist, the software instantly labelled it: Insects. Well, they're right; there are two insects on the mushroom. But I was surprised that it bypassed the obvious large mushroom. Maybe because without a human expert involved, there are too many options. Google image search comes up with various Russula, Lactarius, and Lactifluus species; online guides and my books leave me with the same options. On iNaturalist I had to settle for Milkcaps, Brittlegills and Allies: Family Russulaceae. For any closer identification, I would have had to dig up the mushroom, look at the base of its stalk, break the stalk, get a spore print ... All of which I am reluctant to do; let it be.
The insects, now; There's a light-winged fly, and what looks like a small brown moth. And — you have to look closely — a harvestman (not an insect, an arachnid).
And down below, two clumps of a yellow coral mushroom, probably Ramaria sp. Which I didn't even see, being so interested in the speckly gills of the big mushroom. Or I would have taken more photos of just the corals.
This was at the bottom of the hill, by the lake shore. Up top, near the parking lot, there were a great number of other coral fungi; these were all white.
![]() |
| Funnel-shaped top; I don't see the insects here. |
This was at the bottom of the hill, by the lake shore. Up top, near the parking lot, there were a great number of other coral fungi; these were all white.
![]() |
| Probably Clavulina sp. |
![]() |
| Another. The bluish base may indicate that it has been parasitized by another fungus, Helminthosphaeria clavariarum. |
![]() |
| And a third. Note the forked tips of each branch. "Cristate" is the technical word; meaning crested. So this may be Clavulina cristata. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mira esta foto: ¿qué ves?
1. Un hongo grande, con laminillas. Y hongos coralinos. Y además una mosca, una mariposa nocturna, y un opilión.
Cuando subí esta foto a iNaturalist, el programa instantáneamente la catalogó bajo "Insectos". Y tiene razón; hay dos insectos sobre el hongo. Pero me sorprendió que no había nombrado el hongo, que es el objeto que más salta a la vista. Tal vez sea porque, sin ayuda de algún experto humano hay demasiadas posibilidades. Una búsqueda por imagen en Google sugiere varias especies de los géneros Russula, Lactarius, y Lactifluus; lo mismo encuentro en mis libros guía y sitios web. En iNaturalist, por fin, tuve que escoger la Familia Russulaceae. Para llegar a una identificación específica, tendría que desenterrar el hongo, mirar la base de su tallo, romperlo, tomar una esporada ... Todo lo cual, destrozando el hongo, no me siento con derecho a hacer.
Los insectos: hay una mosca con alas blancas, y lo que parece ser una mariposa nocturna muy chica, color café. Y — para esto, tienes que aumentar la foto — un opilión. Que no es un insecto, sino un arácnido.
Y en el margen inferior de la foto, hay dos ejemplares de un hongo coralino amarillo, probablemente Ramaria sp. Este no lo vi hasta mirar la foto en casa, ya que en el sitio, me estaba fijando en esas laminillas manchadas. Si no, hubiera sacado algunas fotos del hongo coralino por si solo.
2. El sombrero del hongo, visto desde arriba. Tiene forma de embudo. Aquí no veo los insectos.
Estos hongos estaban a unos pasos del lago. Subiendo el cerro hasta el estacionamiento, encontré muchos otros hongos coralinos; estos todos eran blancos.
3. Probablemente sea Clavulina sp.
4. Otro. El color azul que tiñe la base puede indicar que ha sido infectado con otro hongo, Helminthosphaeria clavariarum.
5. Y otro. Cada ramita tiene la punta dividida, en forma de cresta. El hongo, entonces, puede ser Clavulina cristata.






No comments:
Post a Comment
I'm having to moderate all comments because Blogger seems to have a problem notifying me. Sorry about that. I will review them several times daily, though, until this issue is fixed.
Also, I have word verification on, because I found out that not only do I get spam without it, but it gets passed on to anyone commenting in that thread. Not cool!