Other caps, gills below, no stem


 

The fungi in this sub-group have caps with smooth to slightly roughened upper surfaces. The cap surfaces are not furry, though there may be a slight furriness near the attachment point. On the underside there may be some forking of gills or occasional weak veins between them but radial gills are clearly dominant. The fungi in most of the genera in this group produce white spore prints.

 

In the following hints you see examples of useful identification features and a few of the more commonly seen genera in which at least some species (not necessarily all) show those features.

 

Hints

Brown spore print: Crepidotus, Tapinella.

Pink spore print: Entoloma.

Orange to red caps: Anthracophyllum.

On soil amongst mosses: Arrhenia.

On woodchip mulch: Tapinella.

On the underside of dead wood, with the top of the cap attached to the wood: Resupinatus.

With serrated gill edges (much like a saw blade): Lentinellus.

Glows in the dark: Omphalotus.

Cap at least partially gelatinized: Hohenbuehelia.

 

Warning

The gelatinization in Hohenbuehelia may disappear in dry weather.

 


Other caps, gills below, no stem

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Discussion

Heino1 wrote:
2 Sep 2024
I don't think the surface looks furry enough for a Schizophyllum. Neither is it grey(ish) nor lobed. I'd guess this is a partially dried Crepidotus.

Crepidotus sp.
kasiaaus wrote:
12 Jul 2024
It was growing under a log.

zz Agaric (stemless)
Pam wrote:
12 Jul 2024
I was thiking Resupinatus as well.

zz Agaric (stemless)
Heino1 wrote:
11 Jul 2024
Perhaps the same as https://canberra.naturemapr.org/sightings/4579042, though no brownish tint showing here.

zz Agaric (stemless)
Heino1 wrote:
11 Jul 2024
I'd guess this is a species of Resupinatus or (perhaps less likely) of Hohenbuehelia.

zz Agaric (stemless)
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