- 8th grade of Tepu School that came for the mushroom tasting
- A beetle? camouflaged with lichen
- A black staining dull orange Hygrocybe with white gills
- a brown Cookeina - curious what species that could be.
- A Favolus sp.
- a Macrocybe titans, which can grow to be the biggest mushroom in the western hemisphere. Note it was moved from growing under a huge tree, hence the dark edge.
- A polypore with tiny pores
- A polypore with tiny pores, smooth cap and hollow upper stem
- A Trogia, quite similar to Trogia venenata from Yunnan that is infamous having killed 300 people.
- Agaricus sp. in the A. xanthoderma group, with a strong phenolic odor and yellow staining stem base seen in Yopal. Should be slightly toxic.
- An overmature Macrolepiota
- An unidentified Lentinus sp. that probably is edible...
- At a village meeting Daniel presents the most common edible mushrooms.
- Auricularia delicata, a common edible wood ear. Strangely we found only these babies. Apparently it had not rained sufficient in Tepu yet.
- backsides of the brown red Cookeina with scale
- Bresadolia paradoxa growing in Yopal. When it was still known as Polyporus udus I really enjoyed eating it in the Bolivian Amazon. However, specimen was slightly bitter after we fried it.
- Cantharellus guyanensis - the Guyana Chanterelle
- Cantharellus guyanensis basket in Romano hands
- Cantharellus guyanensis Display
- Cantharellus guyanensis field around the Teramu (Caesalipinaceae) tree