- 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.
Note it was moved from growing under a huge tree, hence the dark edge. Seen in Yopal, Casanare, Colombia. - 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.
Bresadolia paradoxa was described from the Brazilian Atlantic forest. Bresadolia uda, first described as Polyporus udus is native in SE Asia. - Cantharellus guyanensis - the Guyana Chanterelle
- Cantharellus guyanensis basket in Romano hands
- Cantharellus guyanensis Display
- Cantharellus guyanensis field around the Teramu (Caesalipinaceae) tree