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Bitter Oyster By day, this mushroom is unassuming, common, and mostly overlooked. But, it becomes a spectacular beauty at night with its bioluminescent gills, which incidentally make a decent nightlight when camping. This mushroom has a fan-shaped, wooly, white cap with an inrolled margin. Cinnamon-tan colored gills. Off-center, fuzzy, white stipe.  Bitter Oyster,Bitter oyster,Geotagged,Panellus stipticus,United States,Winter,fungus,mushroom,oyster Click/tap to enlarge

Bitter Oyster

By day, this mushroom is unassuming, common, and mostly overlooked. But, it becomes a spectacular beauty at night with its bioluminescent gills, which incidentally make a decent nightlight when camping. This mushroom has a fan-shaped, wooly, white cap with an inrolled margin. Cinnamon-tan colored gills. Off-center, fuzzy, white stipe.

    comments (3)

  1. Interesting, got any nightly shots? :) Posted 7 years ago
    1. No, I don't. The bioluminescence doesn't show much at all with older specimens like this one. But, I will be on a mission to get a shot at night this coming summer! Posted 7 years ago
      1. I'll wait :) No pressure. Posted 7 years ago

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"Panellus stipticus", commonly known as the bitter oyster is a species of fungus in the family Mycenaceae, and the type species of the genus "Panellus". A common and widely distributed species, it is found in Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America, where it grows in groups or dense overlapping clusters on the logs, stumps, and trunks of deciduous trees, especially beech, oak, and birch.

Similar species: Agaricales
Species identified by Christine Young
View Christine Young's profile

By Christine Young

All rights reserved
Uploaded Jan 31, 2018. Captured Jan 27, 2018 12:58 in 80 Main St, Sharon, CT 06069, USA.
  • Canon EOS 80D
  • f/2.8
  • 1/166s
  • ISO100
  • 100mm