Growing clustered on rotting hardwood log on well-shaded, north facing, mixed oak/hickory woodland slope.
Stipe elastic and hallow. Stipe increasing thickness at base. Clustering. Shallow gills. Cap surface brown-orange.
Smell: stipe phenolic; cap nutty
Taste: phenolic, faint
KOH: olive-gray on stipe and pileipellis, and honey colored on hymenium. (Later turning red on pileipellis)
Cultivated from observation https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/186962390. Cultured on agar then the mycelium/ conidia was mixed with water and introduced via a spray bottle into a pot with soil and fungus gnat infection. first infected fly appeared a few days later and continues to kill fly's a week later. Photos of parasitized fungus gnat's on the inside of the ceramic pot.
Emerging from large decaying hardwood log in the bottom of low moist woodland draw dominated by paw paw trees. Locally abundant on log and absent on nearby logs. Specimens appear to be parasitizing Ophiocordyceps variabilis and/or directly competing for its larval host.
Reference for the creation of new genera (Niveomyces and Torrubiellomyces) that parasitize Cordyceps and Ophiocordyceps - https://doi.org/10.3767/persoonia.2022.49.05
Similar observation - https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20957798
Sister observation for the Ophiocordyceps variabilis - http://www.inaturalist.org/observations/170023277
In flowerbed with irises, but near a very large pin oak. Smells mildly cheesy-nutty-mushroomy.
Spores were photographed under a microscope by Chance Brueggeman (cbrueg). He observed mainly 4 spores per asci, some less, and very few with 5. He observed it was dextrinoid in Melzer's Reagent.
On Ophiocordyceps unilateralis complex on moss on tree.
F1041
Growing gregariously on large well-rotted Eastern Cottonwood log in low, moist riparian woodland area near small creek.
Pileipellis and stipe navy blue to nearly black. Gills turning pink with age. Quite small. Spores angular.
Growing terrestrially in area with many cottonwoods. Immediately nearby trees included dogwood, elm, maple, and ash.
Last photos shows KOH (left) and ammonia (right) reactions.
Growing terrestrially under pine.
KOH and Ammonia negative on cap.
Smelled somewhat like bleach, or perhaps some other "chemical" scent.
Tasted indistinct to very mildly sweet.
Spore print white
More info at My World of Bird Photography
Found in ravine at 1200ft elevation, no rain for a couple days, 80° high but it was relatively cooler in the pit of this valley. Water still running. Probably 15-20ft up the hill from the running water. Host: Cicada nymph? Ophiocordyceps heterpoda sensu lato(?)
Originally posted to MycoMap.com on May 16, 2019 by MycoMap.com user: Aaron Peters at https://mycomap.com/10486.
The fuzzy stuff on Stereum complicatum
Added micro pics 03Dec2022. Doesn't offer any better clue as to what it is. A fresher example might help but it looks like detritus.
blue staining
Foray 0
This felt more like a mushroom than that orange foam stuff. I believe the holes are from where little kids poked a stick through it. I don't know what species of tree this was, but I do know it was deciduous.
This fungi sprouted out of a Big-headed Ground Beetle a day or two after it’s collection. The location is where the beetle was collected.
Growing on wood as a saprobe. White spores
It bled red when cutting. Looked like raw meat when sliced. Smelled and looked like beef when frying in butter. Had a sour but pleasant taste. Found in the hollow of an oak tree