Author Topic: Autumnal creatures.  (Read 43663 times)

Lars Hansen

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #120 on: October 04, 2022, 13:34:04 »
I found this tiny beastie growing in my compost heap.
About 6cm high
Anyone know the name?

Colin - with the long stem and blackened liquid cap then take a look at Coprinus species - ink caps.
According to Wikipedia: Coprinus means "living on dung" - living on your compost heap :)

mxbianco

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #121 on: October 05, 2022, 08:42:58 »
Clathrus Cancellatus

You can smell this one from tens of meters away, it smells of cadaver, attracts flies and they get stuck in its sticky flesh

Nikon Z7, 60mm f/2.8G AF-S N ED micro-Nikkor + FTZ

Ciao from Massimo

Since evolution has given us TWO ears and ONE mouth, we are supposed (me included) to be doing more listening than talking.

mxbianco

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #122 on: October 05, 2022, 10:07:51 »
I found this tiny beastie growing in my compost heap.
About 6cm high
Anyone know the name?

Coprinus lagopus

Found this one in yesterday's stroll across the mountains, your sample shows a mushroom in an advanced state of decay: the edge starts rolling up and blackening, eventually it melts into a black puddle (deliquescence).

My sample had probably just emerged from the leaves and humus in the forest, it's translucent to the point that you can see through it. In the forest it looked like someone had lost some liquor glasses...

Nikon Z7, 60mm f/2.8G AF-S N ED micro-Nikkor + FTZ

Ciao from Massimo
Since evolution has given us TWO ears and ONE mouth, we are supposed (me included) to be doing more listening than talking.

Akira

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #123 on: October 05, 2022, 11:46:26 »
Clathrus Cancellatus

You can smell this one from tens of meters away, it smells of cadaver, attracts flies and they get stuck in its sticky flesh

Nikon Z7, 60mm f/2.8G AF-S N ED micro-Nikkor + FTZ

Ciao from Massimo

Wow, this looks beautiful and scary at the same time.  Thank you for sharing!
"The eye is blind if the mind is absent." - Confucius

"Limitation is inspiration." - Akira

mxbianco

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #124 on: October 05, 2022, 12:46:06 »
Wow, this looks beautiful and scary at the same time.  Thank you for sharing!

Thanks, Akira!

Please note the pentagonal shape of each facet, just like a football (soccer) sphere, allowing for a spherical shape. Had it been hexagonal, you'd have had a bidimensional mushroom...

Ciao from Massimo
Since evolution has given us TWO ears and ONE mouth, we are supposed (me included) to be doing more listening than talking.

ColinM

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #125 on: October 05, 2022, 20:34:14 »
Thank you Lars and Massimo

Coprinus lagopus
... your sample shows a mushroom in an advanced state of decay: the edge starts rolling up and blackening, eventually it melts into a black puddle (deliquescence).

Fascinating
Plus your Clathrus is amazing Massimo
With that reputation, I'm happy to gaze at its fascinating structure and colour, without being overcome by the smell ;)

Fons Baerken

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #126 on: October 08, 2022, 21:45:44 »
Phallus impudicus

growing in the street

Zfc - 23mm f.1.4

ColinM

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #127 on: October 10, 2022, 10:40:41 »
Phallus impudicus
growing in the street
I love it when nature reminds us who's really in charge Fons :)

mxbianco

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #128 on: October 10, 2022, 14:09:53 »
Phallus impudicus

growing in the street

Zfc - 23mm f.1.4

Not a Phallus impudicus, see for comparison this link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phallus_impudicus, it's a Coprinus type fungus, possibly a Coprinus comatus. You can tell by the blackening edge of the mushroom. Phallus impudicus has a greenish tinge (Wikipedia descibes it as "...with a slimy, dark olive colored conical head.", and it stinks to high heaven, just like the Clathrus cancellatus.

You can see a Coprinus comatus on the attached photo, notice the less robust stem compared to phallus impudicus, which has a dicky appearence (phallus=male member)

Nikon Z7, 60mm f/2.8G AF-S N ED micro-Nikkor

Ciao from Massimo

Since evolution has given us TWO ears and ONE mouth, we are supposed (me included) to be doing more listening than talking.

Fons Baerken

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #129 on: October 10, 2022, 18:28:55 »
Thanks Colin and Massimo for the clarification

ColinM

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #130 on: October 10, 2022, 21:47:30 »
...Phallus impudicus, see for comparison this link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phallus_impudicus

I think you were understandably being modest by just posting the link to the Common Stinkhorn Massimo
(well that's one English name for it).

A long, long time ago I did a Biology degree. The head of the faculty was a Botanist and one autumn he took great delight in bringing back a very well endowed example of this.
It was put on full display (under a tall domed glass container) in the front entrance, so everyone arriving would walk past it.
Nowadays, that might not be considered politically correct (though of course perfectly fine in that faculty)

I wonder if any of our NG searchers for Autumnal Creatures will find an example to share here?
:)

mxbianco

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #131 on: October 11, 2022, 16:07:56 »

I wonder if any of our NG searchers for Autumnal Creatures will find an example to share here?


I'm pretty sure I have a pic somewhere, but it could be in the remaining 24000 color slides I haven't scanned yet... A quick look in the -many- pics of my digital database turned up nothing.

For the time being, here's another mushroom from last outing, a Coriolus versicolor (Turkey tail):

NIKON Z7, 60mm f/2.8G AF-S N ED micro-Nikkor + FTZ

Ciao from Massimo
Since evolution has given us TWO ears and ONE mouth, we are supposed (me included) to be doing more listening than talking.

Fons Baerken

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #132 on: October 11, 2022, 16:22:31 »


September 17, 2017

IR image, D5300, 18-140mm

Lars Hansen

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #133 on: October 20, 2022, 20:25:48 »
As far as I can see this is Pholiota squarrosa. Shaggy scalycap.


ColinM

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Re: Autumnal creatures.
« Reply #134 on: October 21, 2022, 20:51:11 »
Interesting Lars
One fungus I see a lot in the UK (and over a period of several weeks from September until well into October) has the UK name of the parasol mushroom (Macrolepiota procera)

I noticed some similarities with the scaling on the top, though the colours are quite different.