

My first time growing Ganoderma lucidum
I normally grow things like pioppino, lions mane and oysters, this is my first time growing a polypore. It took a long time, many months haha. I think this was inoculated back in november and I just got around to fruiting a few weeks ago. Lots of spore samples to put under the microscope, let me tell you.
Xanthoparmelia cumberlandia + 5% KOH makes a gorgeous pigment
Went out to take a look at some massive colonies of Xanthoparmelia growing on a rock face. 5% potassium hydroxide test results in a nice deep yellow, almost green stain on the upper cortex. The medula is also K+, turning a deep blood red/orange. I blotted the soaked lichen on some paper and got this beautiful golden-rod ink. This ink was produced from less than a cm2 of lichen and a couple drops of KOH. I would love to experiment more given the abundance of this lichen and the small amount of material needed to produce the ink. This photo was taken 24hrs after staining the paper but I'd need to further test the colour fastness.
Edit: I am conscious of ethical harvesting practices for lichens, I normally only harvest for identification purposes and even then I try to only collect samples detached from the substrate.
Peniophora rufa
Red tree brain fungus, love to see this guy. Typically only find it on fallen branches that are very soggy but not super rotted.
Beautiful lichen I don't see a lot, its probably very common in my area but just not in my normal spots. Apothecia are striking, hope I find more.
I have a site I run on amateur mycology/lichenology. citizenmycology.ca
Amanita Muscaria
Snapped a pic of this cutie awhile ago. Beautiful.
Made a focus stack of some stick I found while on a walk, I guess my lens was a bit dirty so the dirty spot got repeated a few times since it was hand held
Made a focus stack of some stick I found while on a walk, I guess my lens was a bit dirty so the dirty spot got repeated a few times since it was hand held
@Mycology@mander.xyz
macro | #lichen | #zerenestacker
laowa | #stick | #sonya7riii
Parasitic Fungus Eating German Wasp
The first thing this fungus does to its newly infected victim is to take over the insects mind. A zombie is created. the insect is forced to climb up and up. Eventually stopping, it latches on as tight as possible to the nearest branch. The insect will never move again.
Now the processes can really start, the fungi fully devours the insect interior. using the energy gathered, long spore producing structures are extruded out of the insects body.
like little ships sailing to colonise new land, thousands of spores float away on ever drifting air currents. the cycle continues
Found in New Zealand
Tree species: rimu, Dacrydium cupressinum
Wasp species: german wasp, Vespula germanica
Fungus species: genus and species currently unknown by me, any info would be much appreciated.
Sunshine Coast, Queensland
Note the fly in the bottom left corner.
I assume it must be quite smelly to attract that?
Cladonia sp. in spruce forest
Definitely in my top 3 favourite genera of lichenized fungi. So photogenic too, I always get down on my knees for pixie cups (reindeer lichen too, if I'm being honest).
Looking for Queensland or Australian specific resources
Just wondering about more local communities and resources that pertain directly to my geographical area. Most resources are generalised, or specific to north america from what i've seen
Books especially appreciated.
Rusavskia elegans, probably my favorite lichen.
Found growing on concrete but I also often find it on metal. Anyone have any idea why it was changed back to Xanthoria elegans in Macrolichens of the PNW?
A travelling-wave strategy for plant–fungal trade
Abstract
For nearly 450 million years, mycorrhizal fungi have constructed networks to collect and trade nutrient resources with plant roots1,2. Owing to their dependence on host-derived carbon, these fungi face conflicting trade-offs in building networks that balance construction costs against geographical coverage and long-distance resource transport to and from roots3. How they navigate these design challenges is unclear4. Here, to monitor the construction of living trade networks, we built a custom-designed robot for high-throughput time-lapse imaging that could track over 500,000 fungal nodes simultaneously. We then measured around 100,000 cytoplasmic flow trajectories inside the networks. We found that mycorrhizal fungi build networks as self-regulating travelling waves—pulses of growing tips pull an expanding wave of nutrient-absorbing mycelium, the density of which is self-regulated by fusion. This design offers a solution to conflicting trade demands because relatively
Found over the fall of 2024.
These tiny mushrooms popped up in my seed starter tray. The cap of the biggest one, the one in the center seems to have unraveled into this long white string. Does anyone know why it did that or what kind of mushroom this might be?
The mushrooms south-west of Monviso
A few mushrooms I found when doing the Giro del Monviso in Italy/France last September. I generally am not good at recognising mushrooms, but I was with a friend with whom we discussed some features and made hypothesis of the easier ones. Would appreciate any further tips on identification.