West Acre
Beech Mast Candlesnuff (XYlaria carpophila)
Field Blewit (Clitcybe saeva)
Spruce Cone Cap (Strobilurus esculenta)
Diaporthopsis pantherina on Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum)
Egg cases?
Initially thought to be a Leucoagaricus Sp but the gills got darker as time passed and the sporeprint was brown.
The spores were too large to be Agaricus sylvaticus, which looks similar.
Agaricus langei
Lichen Sp
Milkcap Sp
Orange Milkcap (Lactarius aurantiacus)
Uttelry delightful Spotted Snake Millipede (Blaniulus guttulatus)
Oak Tooth Crust (Radulomyces molaris)
Ombrophila Sp on the roots of Alder?
From AC
And finally - the little disco on the alder roots has had me really stumped. Mainly because it was so far gone that the asci had mostly disintegrated,
the paraphyses had burst and their contents were all mixed up in the cortex and the granular contents from these and the spores stuck to the spores
making them look knobbly. but I did manage to get to see mature spores. So I think I now have an ID - Adelphella (formerly Pachyella) babingtonii.
(FTE, B&K1, Peter Thompson, numerous websites!)
Oyster Mushroom (Pleurotus ostreatus)
Enteloma sericeum
Lumpy Porridge Crust Fungus
'lovely ballon shaped spores'
The last image images from AC
Cylindrobasidium evolvens
Ceriporiopsis givescens
Hypomyces rosellus
Split Porecrust (Schizodoxa paradoxa)
Slime Mold Sp
Trichia botrytis comples
Spider Sp delicately traversing the fruit body of Deconica phillipsii
Deconica phillipsii
Ascoryne Sp
Waxy Crust on Alder (Vuilleminia alni)
Douglas Fir Bark (Pseudotsuga menziesii)
Blushing Bracket (Daedalopsis confragosa)
Glistening Inkcap (Coprinellus micaceus)
Wild Dry Rot (Serpula lachrymans)
A small Blue green fungus??
Common Mazegill (Datronia mollis)
?
Larch Disco (Lachnellula occidentalis)
Xylaria hypoxylon (Sexual state)
?
?
Cinamon Porecrust (Fuscaporia ferrea) or Rusty Porecrust (Fuscaporea ferruginosa)
Peniophora limitata
From TM
The Godronia ribis on red currant stems (found by Stewart). I couldn't find any cups, only dark brown, spherical bodies, stalkless
(or possibly very short stalks) filled with conidia (9.5x2.9). Many were mature having split open and ejected the internal material.
I found no asci, spores or paraphyses. They don't look anything like the numerous images of G. ribis available for comparison
(FTE etc & good micro illustrations in B&K 1). So perhaps this is the anamorphic stage (previously referred to as Fuckelia ribis)?
See https://www.coelomycetes.org/ascomycota-genera/ascomycota-incertae-sedis/fuckelia/ . These structures remind me of slime mould sporangium.