Spore sac on a star-like base [earthstars]


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Heino1 wrote:
28 Oct 2024
These are photos of dried herbarium specimens. However, these fruitbodies looked virtually the same when they were collected. In the first photo you see several mature fruitbodies, one upside down showing the densely encrusted soil/debris that is bound to the underside. The second shows a close view of the fibrillose peristome. In the third you see the spore sac atop a short stalk and also the dense layer of pale calcium oxalate crystals over the surface of the spore sac. The fruitbodies in the fourth photo are in the process of opening out to create the star-like bases. The fruitbodies formed beneath a layer of debris below some Casuarinas.

Geastrum austrominimum
Heino1 wrote:
1 Oct 2024
The photos show a dried, herbarium collection with the fruitbodies viewed from both the upper sides and the lower sides.

Geastrum lageniforme s.l.
Heino1 wrote:
1 Oct 2024
The first photo shows a dried, herbarium collection. In the top central fruitbody part of the brown fleshy layer has shrunk and split to reveal some of the middle, whiteish fibrous layer. At the lower left you see the white, radial streaks on the underside of the arms, bits of the fibrous layer that show through the radially cracked mycelial layer (as explained at: https://canberra.naturemapr.org/species/21877- and there’s a closer view in the second photo).

Geastrum lageniforme s.l.
Heino1 wrote:
1 Oct 2024
The photo shows a dried, herbarium collection consisting of four unopened fruitbodies and one that’s mature and open. Two of the unopened fruitbodies have pronounced ‘beaks’ and, overall, a distinctly lageniform shape. Three of the unopened ones still have some white, thread-like rhizomorphs attached at their bases. The inset photos show some of the crystals found on the rhizomorphs (and these are briefly mentioned in my comments about this species: Geastrum lageniforme s.l.).

Geastrum lageniforme s.l.
LisaH wrote:
13 Jul 2024
Thank you - this is the largest one I’ve seen, and it had an other-worldly look about it!

Astraeus hygrometricus
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