Possibly Wood Blewit
While tidying up some dead daisies and periwinkle today I found several clumps of fungal fruiting bodies under the map of vegetation. They were an interesting violet colour (see below).
The somewhat splatted appearance in the second image is regretted but it is what happens when a brush cutter hits a fungus!
Using the colour guide in Fungi Down Under (FDU) I conclude that
Referring to Fuhrer as well as FDU gave a good match to Lepista nuda. Googling this name produced a link to Wikipedia suggesting that this species has had more names than any other organism I have come across! For once the vernacular name - Wood Blewit - appears more stable than the scientific equivalent.
Although these fungi were not growing in association with introduced trees such as pines the daisies and periwinkle are certainly not indigenous plants. Thus I think that this observation conforms with the hypothesis that the fungus is introduced, Certainly there seems a large gap in the known distribution between Europe or North America and Australia.
The somewhat splatted appearance in the second image is regretted but it is what happens when a brush cutter hits a fungus!
Using the colour guide in Fungi Down Under (FDU) I conclude that
- the upper surface of the cap matches colour 66 in the Brown-Pink range;
- the gills are 148 in the Violet-Mauve-Pink range; and
- the stem - particularly the base is 137 , also in the Violet-Mauve-Pink range.
Referring to Fuhrer as well as FDU gave a good match to Lepista nuda. Googling this name produced a link to Wikipedia suggesting that this species has had more names than any other organism I have come across! For once the vernacular name - Wood Blewit - appears more stable than the scientific equivalent.
Although these fungi were not growing in association with introduced trees such as pines the daisies and periwinkle are certainly not indigenous plants. Thus I think that this observation conforms with the hypothesis that the fungus is introduced, Certainly there seems a large gap in the known distribution between Europe or North America and Australia.
Comments
Sydney Fugal Studies Group Gallery bears out your ID.
http://www.sydneyfungalstudies.org.au/images/commonFungi/lepistanuda.jpg
.
The other most likely option, for a violet fungus, would be a Cortinarius sp. but they have a very distinctive rusty brown spore print and their spores are prolific, (or at least more obviously so than most, because of their strong colour).
Nice find.
Denis
Martin