Identifizierung: Baumpilz
Verfasst: Freitag, 09. November 2012 00:14
Habitat:
Where does it grow? Jamaica, Caribbean.
What does it grow on? Wood on a meadow.
Gills: Please see the attached photos.
Stem: Please see the attached photos.
Cap: Please see the attached photos.
Spore print color: In process...
Bruising: In process...
Other information: Please see the attached photos.
The picture quality is rather low, as I had only my cell phone with me when I encountered the mushrooms.
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When I came back today, they had cut the lawn and also most of the mushrooms. I was fortunate to got a slice of the trunk with the mushrooms, so I hopefully can grow them now on the original stem at my house.
When those mushrooms are young, their color has shades of ivory: white to light yellowish. Older and dryer, they get darker, like honey yellow.
I am adding some more photos. See here the mushroom two days older, dryer. Also see here the tree trunk, maybe it tells what kind of tree it is.
---
I tried, even on a dark underground (a spent coffee ground and saw dust mix), but the result, if any, was so thin that I wasn't sure if there was a slightly light spore print or just an illusion. So I prefer to answer, that I have no reliable spore print yet (see last photo).
---
I believe the "Pleurocybella porrigens" and the Pleurotus ostreatus have the closest resemblance, what do you all think about it?
Where does it grow? Jamaica, Caribbean.
What does it grow on? Wood on a meadow.
Gills: Please see the attached photos.
Stem: Please see the attached photos.
Cap: Please see the attached photos.
Spore print color: In process...
Bruising: In process...
Other information: Please see the attached photos.
The picture quality is rather low, as I had only my cell phone with me when I encountered the mushrooms.
---
When I came back today, they had cut the lawn and also most of the mushrooms. I was fortunate to got a slice of the trunk with the mushrooms, so I hopefully can grow them now on the original stem at my house.
When those mushrooms are young, their color has shades of ivory: white to light yellowish. Older and dryer, they get darker, like honey yellow.
I am adding some more photos. See here the mushroom two days older, dryer. Also see here the tree trunk, maybe it tells what kind of tree it is.
---
I tried, even on a dark underground (a spent coffee ground and saw dust mix), but the result, if any, was so thin that I wasn't sure if there was a slightly light spore print or just an illusion. So I prefer to answer, that I have no reliable spore print yet (see last photo).
---
I believe the "Pleurocybella porrigens" and the Pleurotus ostreatus have the closest resemblance, what do you all think about it?