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Good for you! Nothing better than fresh Morels sautéed in butter.Any mushroomers out there? Seems like the morels are fading quick this year, Got 2 bonus boletus






























Cool report Steve! Some people candy the jelly tooth and make a sugared gummy-like treat with them. I haven’t tried it and probably never will but I sure like finding them. They’re fun to look at and touchSan Juan Island, Xmas 2025. Unusual fungi, lichens, and mosses. My wife and I hiked down the trail to Jakle’s Lagoon in the American Camp section of San Juan Island Historical Park. It is a great walk through a Douglas fir / cedar forest to this brackish-water lagoon. With high tide and winds from the east, salt water from Griffin Bay was pouring into the lagoon.
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Under storm conditions, massive logs are driven into the lagoon and become trapped there.
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The lagoon is a great breeding area for three-spiked sticklebacks which feed on the abundant calanoid copepods that populate the lake.
On a hike like this, I act like an overactive springer spaniel. My eyes are scanning continuously for anything atypical along the trail and my ear are fine-tuned on any bird sounds in the area (but I don’t have much of a nose…). Most of what we heard were elusive winter wrens who weren’t very cooperative. As you would expect during such a wet time of year, we encountered several species of classic mushrooms along the trail. From a distance, one clump superficially appeared to be simply mushrooms emerging from mosses, but the overall shape of the mushrooms was not quite right - not really symmetrical.
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Upon closer examination, it was clear that these were not mushrooms. They lacked the typical narrow stem, bell-like cap, and gills underneath. Instead, these were very jelly-like and had soft “teeth” underneath the fruit bodies.
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In fact, these were cat’s tongue fungus, Pseudohydnum gelatinosum (aka toothed jelly fungus), a first for me. Each fruiting body was over an inch long.
The cat’s tongue fungus is related to the more common witches’ butter (also known as yellow brain), another jelly fungus. These look like golden globs of jello emerging from a rotten log.
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Jelly fungi are not known to be poisonous, but neither they are known for their culinary qualities either.
On a hike at the English Camp section of San Juan Island Historical Park, we encountered a clump of another unusual fungus, white coral fungus.
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Lichens are fungus-adjacent, a symbiosis of a photosynthetic blue-green or green alga, a network-forming fungus, and often a yeast and/or nitrogen-fixing bacteria. During a walk in the Zylstra Lake, we encountered a patch of freckle-pelt lichen. These form leaf-like bodies on the ground. The dark spots contain the nitrogen-fixing symbionts.
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Finally, the stairstep moss (aka glittering wood moss) is common on San Juan under the forest canopy. This is an unusual moss because the next growth season’s feathery-frond emerges from the frond from the previous year. This potentially allows the moss plant to be aged by counting the connected fronds.
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Steve
When I was in gradual school at U.C.S.B., several friends / roommates / biology graduate students and I decided to hike to a local waterfall in a county park to celebrate a birthday. On a gorgeous spring day, it took us over two hours to hike a mile from the parking lot to the waterfall where we shared a birthday cake. Among the group, we had experts on plants, insects, herps, fungi, and birds. Everything was popping off in the spring. It was such a blast (except for the poison oak).Steve, if you and I were to hike together we wouldn’t make it very far! I too am fascinated by all the same stuff. The major difference between you and I is that I have absolutely no idea what any of it is.
My wife gifted me a macro les for my camera so I can finally take good photos of the stuff I find. I love your pictures and explanations behind what you’re showing us.
Thanks!
That sounds like a good time!When I was in gradual school at U.C.S.B., several friends / roommates / biology graduate students and I decided to hike to a local waterfall in a county park to celebrate a birthday. On a gorgeous spring day, it took us over two hours to hike a mile from the parking lot to the waterfall where we shared a birthday cake. Among the group, we had experts on plants, insects, herps, fungi, and birds. Everything was popping off in the spring. It was such a blast (except for the poison oak).
Steve
There will be reports at the end of January / early February that will be EPIC... The White Continent...Cabezon - love your pictures and the facts that you pass along to the rest of us. It actually makes my brain hurt!
Keep it up. Looking forward to the next lesson!
On a side note, if bacteria, fungi and algae showed up at a party, could you guess that they might take a Lichen to each otherThere will be reports at the end of January / early February that will be EPIC... The White Continent...
Steve