Here are a few pictures of some cool fungus I found on a hike in Valldemossa:
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This wood rotter was found on a small Quercus ilex. It has a really cool poroid hymenophore. |
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This spot had several of these puffballs... |
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Have to love Ascomycota! |
We were too late to catch the bus to Valldemossa so instead we went somewhere new, Bunyola. It has a nice mix of pine and oak forest and some really cliffs that you can see here.
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A close up of the apothecia of a Diploschistes sp. |
This Diploschistes was found growing on some mosses. |
I have been on a mission to find this brilliant orange lichen appropriately called the Golden Eye Lichen (Teloschistes chrysophthalmus). |
It is so cool looking with the bright orange apothecia with the cilia lined margins! |
Some yellow-orange Xanthoria parietina mixed in with Physcia leptalea. |
Some of these twigs of Quercus ilex are just COVERED in lichens! This looks like a nice mix of X. parietina, Physcia leptalea, a Parmelia sp., and some bits of a Ramalina sp. |
A tiny gelatinous-looking fungus poking its fruiting bodies out through the bark of a Q ilex twig. |
Some Targionia sp. growing on a muddy cliff face. |
This is not technically botany but these bug eggs are really awesome! |
These earth stars (Geastrum sp.) were everywhere in the higher elevation areas around 300 meters and higher. |
A beautiful gelatinous lichen that was very prevalent on many of the rocky cliff faces. It was frequently found with mosses. |
This is likely to be Euphorbia characias subsp. characias. It flowers from February to July and apparently has some medicinal properties. |
A good looking crustose lichen. |
Another good looking crustose lichen. |
The strange mushroom that is Clathrus ruber. Unfortunately it was over the hill when I saw it. Check it out in its prime!
This is definitely one of the stranger fungi I have ever seen. It looks like some kind of cast off alien biomass! I had a feeling I new this one from somewhere and I was thinking of the family Phallaceae...
When I was at the University, I was waiting in the botany lab and picked up a book on Catalunian fungi and lo and behold I saw my mystery fungus when I started flipping through the Phallaceae section!
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Yep, definitely some kind of alien flesh... |
A wood rotter at the base of a Q. ilex. |
A good shot of the trail I took through the forest in Bunyola. Definitely headed back there! |
Check it out! |
It kinda looks like it is imitating a fly don't you think? |
Sporophytes |
Some mosses starting to dry out and curl up their leaves to preserve water. |
I have no idea what these are but they look really cool close up. |
Look at all that Ramalina pusilla just covering the acebuche! |
The town of Valldemossa, which appropriately means "Valley of the Mosses" in Catalan. |
There is a wide diversity of ferns but I unfortunately don't know much about ferns so I can't tell you what they are. |
Cladonia pyxidata looking quite squamulose. |
More Cladonia pyxidata. It is really common here. |
A cool shot of some kind of caterpillar on a wood rotting fungus with very cool lamellae. |
Three tall sporophytes |
A moss on the verge of elevating it's sporophytes. Look at all those silvery awns! |
A very small leafy liverwort that looked like a green film from far away. It was covering the soil of a cut cliff face. |
A close-up of the flowers of Erica multiflora. |
A species of Parmelia. |
Another species of Parmelia. |
Slimy little guy... |
Peltigera membranacea looks so cool growing mixed in with the mosses. |
This stuff looks so awesome close up! Get me a microscope for my birthday por favor?! |
Cladonia rangiformis mixed in with some mosses. |
Evernia prunastri |
Another Parmelia species mixed in with what looks like some Frullania on a dead snag. |