Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Cat's Tongue

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I found these cool little jelly mushrooms yesterday while looking for bigger Pacific Northwest fungus species to photograph. This unique and very interesting toothed jelly mushroom is found throughout the world and grows mostly on decaying coniferous wood. Although it is considered edible, it is reported to have almost no taste, and is often "candied" with sugar and sometimes other ingredients. This one was found in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest near the Greenwater River, in the Cascade Mountains in Pierce County, Washington.

Copyright
©2015 All Rights Reserved
Image Size
4000x6000 / 12.2MB
Keywords
Agaricomycetes, America, Auriculariales, Basidiomycota, Cascade Mountains, Eispilz, Fungi, Gallertiger Zitterzahn, Greenwater Trail, Hydnum gelatinosum, Incertae sedis, Kocsonyás álgereben, Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, P. gelatinosum, PNW, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Pierce County, Pseudohydnum, Pseudohydnum gelatinosum, Tremelle gélatineuse, Tremellodon gélatineux, USA, United States, Washington, autumn, beautiful, beauty, biology, botanical, cat's tongue, clear, close-up, closeup, colorless, conservation, eatable, edible, environment, fall, false hedgehog mushroom, food, forage, foraging, forest, fungus, jelly, jelly false tooth, jelly hedgehog, jelly tongue, jelly tooth, mushroom, natural, nature, organic, organism, plant, saprobic, stalk, stem, stipe, tasteless, toothed jelly, uncultivated, wet, white, white jelly, wild, wood, woods
Contained in galleries
Jelly-like Fungi
I found these cool little jelly mushrooms yesterday while looking for bigger Pacific Northwest fungus species to photograph. This unique and very interesting toothed jelly mushroom is found throughout the world and grows mostly on decaying coniferous wood. Although it is considered edible, it is reported to have almost no taste, and is often "candied" with sugar and sometimes other ingredients. This one was found in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest near the Greenwater River, in the Cascade Mountains in Pierce County, Washington.