Growing on plywood. Gelatinous.
Not sure but suspect it is a slime mold. Touched it and it was powdery, pinkish-orange spores. On a Heterospathe elata (Palma brava) trunk on bank of Lonfit River.
Stinkhorn (Genus Phallaceae, possibly Phallus indusiatus)
Photos from iPhone, hiking in Guam. Fungi, plants, limestone forest, reef terraces, etc.
Phallaceae, possibly Phallus multicolor. Photographed in bamboo grove by Asalonso River, Talofofo, Guam.
Hiking miscellaneous
Two fruiting bodies in loamy substrate about 6 feet apart. No eggs. Could smell the spore slime from a few feet away.
Really terrible photos of the bioluminescence. Doesn’t do it justice. Growing in dead bamboo and bamboo leaf litter along Madog River with Mycena chlorophos. The Mycena is more prevalent though. This seems limited to one spot in this bamboo grove. Default and last photos were taken by Dalia Hernandez-Ortiz, uploaded with permission. Center is N.nambi, others are Mycena chlorophos.
Growing in eroded silty clay in savanna. I usually see this growing in areas with Acacia auriculiformis trees; possible mycorrhizal association?
Growing on plywood. Gelatinous.
Hard fungi growing from a partially burned tangantangan stump. Cut in half it has growth rings inside and looks like charcoal. Brown powdery surface (spores?). Black resinous goop in outer layer when cut.
Slime mold on the end of a stick, Piti Guns Unit, War in the Pacific National Historical Park.
Bioluminescent fungi, not Mycena sp but found near it in same habitat, bamboo (Bambusa vulgaris) grove in Umatac. Sorry for terrible photos. Mycelium was not bioluminescent.