wish it wasn’t winter so i could still go on mushroom walks 😢🍄🟫

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Ukraine
seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Egypt
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from China
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Russia
wish it wasn’t winter so i could still go on mushroom walks 😢🍄🟫
Some kind of bolete mushroom
Boletales
This bolete featured unusually large, bright yellow pores.
There are over 150 described bolete species in the Midwestern United States alone, so sometimes it's a challenge to narrow them down to an exact species ID. It's not an ash tree bolete. I found this one while doing field research in an old growth forest near the Meramec River near swamp white oak, pin oak, cottonwood, silver maple, green ash, persimmon, and hackberry trees. I'm not sure which tree it was associated with.
Aug. 18th, 2023
Arnold, Jefferson County, Missouri, USA
Olivia R. Myers
@oliviarosaline
I thought this was a big rock, so I kicked it with my foot. Sadly don't have photos of an intact bolete to display here 🤷♂️
(This is a fungus BTW)
16/09/23 - Pisolithus albus
QLD:BRB - Country road, dry bush
boletinellus merulioides found up the back garden underneath a stand of exotic bamboo
Boletales
Alcochete/Portugal (16/11/2023)
[Nikon D850; ∑150mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM APO Macro with Flash Nissin Di 700A; 1/250s; F16; 400 ISO]
This time of year (late summer, although it doesn’t feel like it), one of the most commonly seen mushrooms in the Pacific Northwest is this species, Tapinella atrotomentosa. It’s often called the velvet rimroll, and, rather misleadingly, the velvet pax, (which would seem to imply that it’s a Paxillus species - it is not!). Tapinella is, oddly, in the order Boletales. Why is this odd? Because most Boletales have pores on the underside of the cap, not gills!
This species has a soft, velvet like cap, with a dark velvety stipe below, and as a saptrotroph grows exclusively on dead wood - conifer wood, to be specific.
Some foragers are disappointed to learn that this mushroom is considered inedible - it’s very bitter and rather tough. It does have one very cool use, though: dye! Here are some sites that show what Tapinella atrotomentosa dyes can look like, with different mordants (generally dark purples):
Puget Sound Mycological Society Mushrooms for Color
Boletes working together to push up a branch. 8/17 at Historic Yates Mill, North Carolina
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9/16 at Flambeau River State Forest, Wisconsin