- Tetrapyrgos nigripes Minca DW Ms
- Thalictrum chelidonii seen in KunzangDra
- Thamnomyces chordalis Pello de brujo WM S
- That's how small these tiny Xylophallus xylogenus stinkhorns are.
- The 2019 Mushroaming Fungal Fellowship. During a short stop at an old-growth spruce forest we found Netcap King boletes (Boletus reticuloceps), Ochre Himalayan Caesars (Amanita hemibapha var ochracea or now A. ochracea) and Blewits (Lepista cf nuda). Th
- The always enticing Cookeina sulcipes (maybe C. speciosa) seen near Yopal
- The anamorph of Nectria pseudotrichia, formerly known as Tubercularia lateritia
- The anamorph of Nectria pseudotrichia, formerly known as Tubercularia lateritia
- The anamorph of Nectria pseudotrichia, formerly known as Tubercularia lateritia - close up
- the backside of Favolaschia caps. The fertile tissue on the other side has big pores, some of them shining subtly through the orange caps.
- The basisio-lichen Cora sp. aka Dictyonema sp. growing in El Cedro
- The bitter taste and rusty brown spores make this gorgeous mushroom likely a Gymnopilus species. Seen in Montana, Casanare, Colombia.
- The bloody Turkey tail, Trametes sanguinea seen in Yopal. It is a traditional remedy used by amerindians to lower a fever.
- The caps of Favolaschia do not reveal the beauty of these mushrooms
- The case of Will & Tug
- The city currently known as Shangri La,
- The elegant Gymnopus macropus was common in Reserva El Cedro
- The Garuda (Tibetan: Khyung), biding down on a snake, will be mounted behind the head of the Buddha statue.
- The gilled polypore Lentinus crinitus or a closely related species. They are edible, but need a extended time of cooking to soften them up.
- The gorgeous Rio Claro flowing in its marble gorge