TEST

Coprinellus etc.

An Inkcap at Fyshwick, ACT

Coprinellus etc. at Fyshwick, ACT - 1 May 2015
Request use of media

Identification history

Coprinellus etc. 19 Jun 2015 MichaelMulvaney
Coprinellus 9 Jun 2015 Heino
Unidentified 12 May 2015 JoshMulvaney

Identify this sighting


Please Login or Register to identify this sighting.

User's notes

Jerrabomberra Wetlands

1 comment

Heino wrote:
   9 Jun 2015
I give Coprinellus simply as a reasonable guess as to the genus. Two or three decades ago small mushrooms such as these would have been placed in Coprinus. Molecular studies split the genus, with a few species staying in Coprinus but the bulk of them being moved to Coprinellus, Coprinopsis or Parasola. In those three the caps have radial grooves and are thin (in general, very thin in Parasola, with the caps often flat or very shallowly curved, much like a dainty parasol, hence the name). In Coprinellus and Coprinopsis the caps often don't flatten out as much. You'll have guessed that since I talk of 'in general' and 'mostly', macroscopic features won't always tell you for certain which genus you have. Correct. One final point: in these genera the mature spores are black so the gills of the mature mushrooms are very dark. There are also pale-spored genera, with thin-fleshed, radially-grooved caps.

Please Login or Register to comment.

Location information

Sighting information

Additional information

  • True In flower

Species information

  • Coprinellus etc. Scientific name
  • An Inkcap Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Local native
  • Non-invasive or negligible
  • Up to 1257m Recorded at altitude
  • Machine learning
  • In flower

Record quality

  • Images or audio
  • More than one media file
  • Verified by an expert moderator
  • Nearby sighting(s) of same species
  • GPS evidence of location
  • Description
  • Additional attributes
1,893,031 sightings of 21,044 species in 9,272 locations from 12,889 contributors
CCA 3.0 | privacy
We acknowledge the Traditional Owners of this land and acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.