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- young Leucocoprinus sp. in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- We called this Selaginella wildenowii spikemoss, the "Walmart fern" since it has such a plastic looking green-blue color that my camera did not do justice too. Seen in Isla Escondida
- Cordyceps on kissing bug in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- Ophiocordyceps binata, aka Ophiocordyceps lloydii var binata top side
- Ophiocordyceps nidus growing out of a trap door spider in his sack, exposed in Isla Escondido, Putumayo
- Cordyceps sp. growing from a Lepidoptera larva, Isla Escondido, Putumayo
- cool orange colored pores of this Coltricia sp. in Isla Escondida
- Cordyceps polyartha, aka Isaria polyartha in Isla Escondido, Putumayo
- Could be an infected immature Hymenochaete damaecornis seen in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- A moth having a real bad case of Cordyceps tuberculata, the telemorph of what was formerly known as Akanthomyces pistillariiformis'
- Rigidoporus wand seen in Isla Escondida
- Detail of the gorgeous stromata of Beauveria sp. on small grasshopper
- Beauveria sp. on a small grasshopper, Isla Escondida
- Ophiocordyceps melolonthae giant larva excavated . Meloloantha include the European Maybug and its Chafer larva
- Cyphellostereum pusiolum showing top and underside of fruiting body with scale 10mm = 1cm
- Cyphellostereum pusiolum growing on rock. This organism is a basidio-lichen in the Hygropharaceae.
- fertile head of Ophiocordyceps evansii seen in Isla Escondida. This and parasitizing species was previously clustered with O. australis, which has a round head.
- Coltricia sp. cap seen in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- Gibellula pulchra growing from a tiny spider in Mocoa. Fitting species name: "pulchra" meaning beautiful in Latin. However a spider might miss the beauty aspect in a Gibellula infection.
- Ophiocordyceps binata seen in Mocoa