Home / Colombia 2016 220
- Marasmius androsaceus gr horsehair parachute
Looks like a Horsehair parachute mushroom, thus formerly a Marasmius and now transferred to Gymnopus. - Marasmius cladophyllus pair
Marasmius cladophyllus pair DW Ms - Marasmius cladophyllus pair gills
Marasmius cladophyllus showing its cool branched gills - Marasmius in Qundio
Leaf-digesting Marasmius sp. seen in Quindio Botanical Garden - Marasmius reduced gill Leticia
A Marasmius with seriously reduced gills - Marasmius stick Leticia
Marasmius growing from a stick in Leticia - Marasmius tomentose cap Quindio
A Marasmius with a tomentose cap growing in Quindio - Marasmius white PuertoNarino
A Marasmius growing out of a leaf seen in Puerto Narino, Colombian Amazon - Metacordyceps sp Leticia
Metacordyceps sp growing in Leticia - Metacordyceps sp on bug detail
Metacordyceps sp. and its bug host - Metacordyceps sp on bug
A Metacordyceps sp on bug - Motmot
Andean Motmot (Momotus aequatorialis) seen in the Botanical garden of Quindio. - Multiclavula Leticia
Multiclavula sp, is a lichen-forming basidiomycete, which are fungi that incorporate cells of a green alga within their tissues. - Ophiocordyceps cf australis white
An Ophiocordyceps infected ant. It looks alot like O. australis, but that has usually a white fertile head of the stroma. - Ophiocordyceps cf curculionum Leticia
An Ophiocordyceps reminiscent of O. curculionum seen in Leticia - Ophiocordyceps curculionum Quindio
Ophiocordyceps curculionum, a beetle infecting Cordyceps encountered in Quindio - Ophiocordyceps evansii
Ophiocordyceps evansii fruiting bodies in different stages of maturity. - Ophiocordyceps evansii
Ophiocordyceps evansii, originally described by Tatiana Sanjuan who is not surprisingly extremely good in finding this tiny ant parasite. - Ophiocordyceps evansii
Ophiocordyceps evansii, an ant Cordyceps described first by Tatiana Sanjuan - Ophiocordyceps unilateralis
Ophiocordyceps unilateralis