Sunday, August 10, 2014

Highlights from the Mushroom Research Centre workshop on Northern Thailand diversity (July 28- August 2)


Most days of the workshop consisted of a collection foray to a local forest in the morning, and an evening in the lab. Many participants were collecting for a specific project, but I took the workshop as an opportunity to hike, work on my mushroom photography, learn how to morphologically identify more mushrooms to genus, and ask other participants about their work. More pictures are on my Flickr photostream (on the right bar of the blog).


Eske and Kadri in their natural habitat.


This Cookeina sp. was particularly large and impressive. This genus is often called "eyelash cup fungus" for obvious reasons.


Thailand has a high diversity and abundance of Ophiocordyceps s.l. species. These fungi parasitize various insects and arachnids and fruit spectacularly from their corpses. The one pictured is probably O. nutans.


Some sort of coralline fungus (Calocera ?) appearing through the leaf litter.


The exoskeleton of a cicada, shed on the underside of an old polypore fungus. When I found it, there was an ant crawling across the mold growing on the exoskeleton left on a fungus, which was also growing mold. Peculiar interactions.

Termitomyces sp. for sale at a roadside stand. This genus is distinctive-- the pointed cone on top is quite solid and often coated in dirt, evidence of how they have to push their way through the packed soil of a termite mound. This genus is named for its obligate symbiotic relationship with termites, which "farm" fungal mycelium. The mushroom fruits from the cultivated mass in an underground termite colony. They are widely eaten and command a relatively high price.




This bolete is being parasitised by another fungus.


This species typically fruits from pine cones.


A typical collection box containing small or fragile specimens. Larger collections are wrapped in tin foil and placed in a basket.


One of my favorite shots of very small fruiting bodies of some sort (Xylariaceae?) that had almost completely covered a large log.


Eske takes pictures with intensity for her taxonomic work on Lactifluus/Lactarius.
A beautiful Amanita. The cap was covered in fragile, powdery "warts" that crumbled at the lightest touch.
A very unusual bolete.


One day, these dogs followed us from start to finish.


The view from one of the day's hikes.


These were very small but striking.


A milk cap exuding "milk/latex" from a small cut.


A member of the genus Phallus.




The only picture of me from the field, with backpack, camera bag, collection box, and anti-mosquito jacket. Thanks Henri for taking it.
Beautiful fungus - Panellus sp.
"Bruising" response of a bolete
Taken by Alvin Tang-- group picture of most of us.


Bamboo forest.



4 comments:

  1. Outstanding photos! Hoping you'll get to see more of mushroom culture, if that's practiced in the area. Keep up the great posts! BTW, this is the first blog I've ever visited. Sad, eh?

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    1. Thank you! I saw some mushroom culture today, but it can be difficult to post on all the farms I see without being repetitive--the essentials all of the systems I've seen are pretty close to the bag system shown in the earlier post about Maejo university

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    2. My bad! I had not gotten to your earlier posts. I've been planning on giving the bag system a try with some _Pleurotus_ spp, just as a hobbyist and seeing where it goes. I've been on Gulf States Mycological Society forays with the head of the 'shroom culture department at Alcorn and with the owners of the Shroomery down past Hattiesburg, got me interested in trying my hand. Let us know if you find anything new and different!

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  2. This is me testing my comments functionality... But also I never saw that that one 'pic' is actually a vid! Also, you in full trekking gear is too adorable.

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