- Check out that cool Psilocybe cubensis cap! Seen in Casanare
- Psilocybe cubensis 2 Casanare DW Ms
- Leucocoprinus birnbaumii - such a dapper cap shape!
- Phaerobolus stellatus Cannon fungus DW Ms
- Purplish Agaric with cm scale. Maybe a Lentinus?
- Purplish Agaric
- Echinochaete brachypora (so I think...), a beautiful polypore
- Bresaldonia young DW Ms
- Macrolepiota capelariae displaying its impressive gills
- Macrolepiota capelariae seen in Montana, Casanare
- 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 bitter taste and rusty brown spores make this gorgeous mushroom likely a Gymnopilus species. Seen in Montana, Casanare, Colombia.
- Hexagonia hydnoides pores under attack by hungry critters. Seen in Montana, Casanare.
- Hexagonia hydnoides with its impressive hairy caps seen in Montana, Casanare.
- Macrolepiota sabulosa var velistellaris Montana DW Ms
- Macrocybe titans gills displaying their clearly notched gill attachment.
- 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 colorful red beetle with yellow spots that hangs out on Auricularia delicata. It reminds me of a beetle, I saw being called a fungus beetle.
- excavated spider burrow with Purpureocillium atypicola in Virgen del Morro
Out of the burrow of a trapdoor spider (see hinged lid) grows the Cordyceps relative Purpureocillium atypicola. The spider is on the inside and mostly digested by the parasitic fungus. - young leaves of Adiantum macrophyllum - Largeleaf Maidenhair fern seen near Yopal