Identification - Ink cap of some sort??

Discussion in 'Fungi, Lichens and Slime Molds' started by Joel Bolete, Jun 2, 2014.

  1. Joel Bolete

    Joel Bolete Active Member

    Messages:
    67
    Likes Received:
    0
    Location:
    Mission BC
    The scientific name eludes me... corprinus? I know its not a Cort, anyways. They are popping up under greenhouse filtered light out of sifted, organic dirt/soil. No trees, No grass, No rotting lumber... that I can see. This was an area claimed from the front yard/lawn 2 years previous.

    I live on a plateau in Abbotsford BC. Perfect for farming and has been farmed commercially for many years (thank gawd no pesticides).
    photo 2.JPG

    photo 1.JPG

    photo 3.JPG

    Details:

    1. Direct sun(filtered)
    2. Plenty of moisture(I watered my peppers)
    3. Dirt/Loam/Clay soil base
    4. No trees
    5. Sifted disturbed soil
    6. No bulb on bottom
    7. Long stem with fragile connection to cap
    8. Fibrous stem, stringy, hollow
    9. Grows in clusters
    10. No spore print... Im lazy
    11. Cap did not seem to discharge staining when crushed between fingers, soil was dry at that time.
    12. No distinct odor, mild mushroomy.
    13. mild mushroom taste.
     
  2. Joel Bolete

    Joel Bolete Active Member

    Messages:
    67
    Likes Received:
    0
    Location:
    Mission BC
    anyone?
     
  3. Frog

    Frog Generous Contributor Forums Moderator 10 Years

    Messages:
    2,539
    Likes Received:
    320
    Location:
    B.C., Canada
    Hi Joel,
    Thanks for posting diagnostic photos and for the details!
    I think you are right: Inky Cap.
    But which one :-)
    Coprinellus, Coprinopsis, Copri... so many new names that used to all be under Coprinus.
    I'd suggest trying the PNW Key Council key to see if any of the characters you have listed cause one of the local species to pop out.
    cheers!
    frog
     

Share This Page