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Selby Shrooms
  • Wild Picked
    • Boletus edulis (Porcini)
    • Smooth Chanterelles, Northern Dandenongs
    • Morchella australiana
    • Leccinum aurantiacum – red-capped Leccinum
    • Cantharellus concinnus
    • FNQ native Australian chanterelle – updated
    • Morchella importuna
    • New chanterelle species found in the Dandenongs! – Updated!
    • Wood Blewit (Lepista nuda)
    • Australian Craterellus species – Black Trumpet
    • Brown Birch Bolete (Leccinum scabrum)
    • Pine Mushrooms (Lactarius deliciosus)
    • Hydnum species – Wood Hedgehogs
    • Pleurotus ostreatus
    • Stropharia rugosoannulata
    • Lepista sordida
    • Grey Ghost / Grey Knight (Tricholoma terreum)
  • Interesting species
    • Leccinum aurantiacum – red-capped Leccinum
    • Smooth Chanterelles, Northern Dandenongs
    • Cantharellus concinnus
    • Australian Craterellus species – Black Trumpet
    • Flammulina velutipes (Wild Enoki / Velvet Shank)
    • Beef steak fungus – Fistulina hepatica
    • Lentinula lateritia – the Australian native Shiitake
    • Macrolepiota clelandii (the Australian Parasol mushroom)
    • Coprinus comatus (The Shaggymane)
    • Armillaria luteobubalina – the Australian Honey Mushroom
    • Cordyceps gunnii
    • The White ‘King Stropharia’ – Stropharia atroferruginea?
    • Marasmius oreades – the fairy ring mushroom
    • Suillus bovinus (the Bovine Bolete) – A new arrival in Selby
    • Suillus luteus / granulatus (The Slippery Jack / Sticky Bun)
  • Agaricus Species
    • Agaricus ‘marzipan’ – the almondy agaricus (JF495057) – updated!
    • Agaricus ‘Pine Forest Wine-cap’ – JF495060 – aff megalocarpus
    • Agaricus ‘Vic Red Stainer’
    • Agaricus subrufescens – an almondy agaricus
    • Agaricus augustus
    • Agaricus ‘mini-arvensis’ – JF495061
    • Agaricus flocculosipes
    • Agaricus ‘No Stain Pine forest’ – JF495040
    • Agaricus bitorquis
    • Agaricus bernardii
    • Agaricus ‘aniseedy’ – an edible member of xanthodermatei?
Selby Shrooms
Selby Shrooms

Selby Shrooms

  • Wild Picked
    • Boletus edulis (Porcini)
    • Smooth Chanterelles, Northern Dandenongs
    • Morchella australiana
    • Leccinum aurantiacum – red-capped Leccinum
    • Cantharellus concinnus
    • FNQ native Australian chanterelle – updated
    • Morchella importuna
    • New chanterelle species found in the Dandenongs! – Updated!
    • Wood Blewit (Lepista nuda)
    • Australian Craterellus species – Black Trumpet
    • Brown Birch Bolete (Leccinum scabrum)
    • Pine Mushrooms (Lactarius deliciosus)
    • Hydnum species – Wood Hedgehogs
    • Pleurotus ostreatus
    • Stropharia rugosoannulata
    • Lepista sordida
    • Grey Ghost / Grey Knight (Tricholoma terreum)
  • Interesting species
    • Leccinum aurantiacum – red-capped Leccinum
    • Smooth Chanterelles, Northern Dandenongs
    • Cantharellus concinnus
    • Australian Craterellus species – Black Trumpet
    • Flammulina velutipes (Wild Enoki / Velvet Shank)
    • Beef steak fungus – Fistulina hepatica
    • Lentinula lateritia – the Australian native Shiitake
    • Macrolepiota clelandii (the Australian Parasol mushroom)
    • Coprinus comatus (The Shaggymane)
    • Armillaria luteobubalina – the Australian Honey Mushroom
    • Cordyceps gunnii
    • The White ‘King Stropharia’ – Stropharia atroferruginea?
    • Marasmius oreades – the fairy ring mushroom
    • Suillus bovinus (the Bovine Bolete) – A new arrival in Selby
    • Suillus luteus / granulatus (The Slippery Jack / Sticky Bun)
  • Agaricus Species
    • Agaricus ‘marzipan’ – the almondy agaricus (JF495057) – updated!
    • Agaricus ‘Pine Forest Wine-cap’ – JF495060 – aff megalocarpus
    • Agaricus ‘Vic Red Stainer’
    • Agaricus subrufescens – an almondy agaricus
    • Agaricus augustus
    • Agaricus ‘mini-arvensis’ – JF495061
    • Agaricus flocculosipes
    • Agaricus ‘No Stain Pine forest’ – JF495040
    • Agaricus bitorquis
    • Agaricus bernardii
    • Agaricus ‘aniseedy’ – an edible member of xanthodermatei?

Australian Craterellus

Australian Craterellus species - Black Trumpet

Australian Craterellus species – Black Trumpet

June 5, 2019June 4, 2019

Well it took a while but some detective work finally paid off and we found the Victorian Craterellus species – our local Horn of Plenty … Read more

DISCLAIMER

The point of our blog is not to suggest that all of these species are reliably safe to pick in the wild and eat. This blog is more a collection of taxonomical information about species of interest - some of which do have a traditional heritage of being described as edible species but some that are just of interest generally - rather than the promoting or advocating of the consumption of wild mushrooms. IT IS UP TO YOU AND YOU ONLY TO GET THE PROPER IDENTIFICATION AND CONFIRMATION OF EDIBILITY.

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Australian Craterellus species - Black Trumpet
Australian Craterellus species - Black Trumpet
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