- Trichaptum perrottetii with 10 cm scale. Yes, Hexagonia comes to mind, but the hymenium is so unusually thin and the pores lacking the typical hexagonal shape.
- Trichaptum perrottetii transect very close up showing how the fibres make up most of the fruiting body.
- Trichaptum perrottetii transect - note how thin the pore layer is.
- Trichaptum perrottetii hymenium of this strangely fibrous polypore
- Trichaptum perrottetii with a purplish edge
- Tiny Hygrocybe sp with scale, each mark is 1 mm
- Three-fingered sloths close up climbing
- Spiny pins of young Mycena mushrooms. Not the cap where the spines scraped off.
- Root tips that tricked me first into being excited to have found a Cordyceps
- Ranger Rani with Oyster mushrooms he collected!
- Rainbow sphere seen from the small "Airvan" plane. This optic manifestation is known in Tibet as a "thigle", the closest look alike nature offers for the human aura
- Rain forest surrounding a mountain with maybe a cave and a field in the back
- Pleurotus sp. growing on Sugar cane
- Pleurotus djamor fruiting #224
- Pleurotus djamor cluster DW Ms
- Lentinus crinitus seen from the side. A rather firm if not tough, but edible mushroom. Turning it into a powder as mushroom spice or cooking it long too soften helps.
- Lentinus crinitus (var. berteroi?), the Fringed Sawgill is an edible mushroom in the polypore family.
- Gills of Pleurotus sp growing on Sugar cane
- Favolus brasiliensis? with an interesting yellow hue.
- Favolus brasiliensis or something close with an interesting yellow hue