Caught attempting to enter a nest of either Amegilla murrayensis or Amegilla asserta.
Running along the ground. Very difficult to get a photo.
Nymph I assume because of small wing buds.
Perhaps picking up dirt off a termite mound. Continually coming back to the mound.
Noticed by Clint G. on the bark of the Eucalyptus sp. trunk.
Caps have greenish hues. It’s noticeable on caps photographed using dissecting microscope (photos 5-8). Magnification: 8-12.5x. Gills are far apart. Young caps don’t have gills (photo 8). They are translucent. In a few hours they’ve changed colour from cream or pale grey to greenish-grey or glaucous. White spore print (photo #10). C
I haven’t seen crossveining between gills whi cJeh is typical for Campanella species.
Spores: 13.8-17.5 x 11.3-16.3um (Av. 15.4 x 13.2um); Q 1.0-1.3 (Av. 1.2); globose to subglobose, thin-walled, with one large and/or many small guttules (usually 4; can be up to 7) (photo 11); inamyloid (photo 12).
Photos 11 & 12 - magnification 1000x
On ridge near track among native bush and weeds of Belair National Park. Sandy clay soil over sandstone and quartzite.