- Village headmen meeting
- Trichaptum perrottetii transect very close up showing how the fibres make up most of the fruiting body.
- The hymenium of the tiny pored polypore with scale
- Trichaptum perrottetii transect - note how thin the pore layer is.
- Trichaptum perrottetii hymenium of this strangely fibrous polypore
- Giant Trametes sp. with daedaloid "gilll-like hymenium seen in Tepu
- dark Favolus showing its pores
- A Favolus sp.
- Marasmiellus / Marasmius sp. gills
- Mycelium climbing on tree base
- Probably a Moelleriella sp. a Cordyceps parasitizing aphids and feeding on the plant as well.
- Pelelu Tepu village in Sipaliwini District with Tapanahoni River
- Rain forest surrounding a mountain with maybe a cave and a field in the back
- Hygrocybe as red as they get!
- Scleroderma camassuense, an ecto-mycorrhizal member of the Boletales
- An overmature Macrolepiota
- Sloth close up climbing at the Sloth Wellness Center
- Villagers checking out mushroom collection
- Moelleriella cluster on a palm frond
- 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.