It's maybe Lactarius chrysorrheus. At first it looked brownish and cream like the Lactarius quietus that I found recently (it's in one of my videos)... but L.quietus tend to have a longer stem, and the milk is white and doesn't turn yellow. When I was trying to ID the L. quietus I found some similar species then. Lactarius rufus is similar to L.quietus but has also white milk. Another one similar is Lactarius decipiens, this one has white milk that turns yellow, but is said to be a slow process (about 10 minutes)... The milk of your specimen turns yellow almost instantaneously. There is one Lactarius that has white milk that turns yellow in just 5 to 15 seconds. It's Lactarius chrysorrheus. It might be what you found. The habitat of L.chrysorrheus is with oak. That's not the leaves we see in the ground though (were there oak trees?). However some sources say that it is also Mycorrhizal with other broadleaf trees. The L.chrysorrheus may also present concentric bands on the cap (you might want to check too if any your specimens had it). If that is the species you found, it's poisonous, I never found it myself.
Very cool sometimes I see bands but the moisture has to be right We have oaks in peoples yards but not big ones in our wild spaces but little ones are popping up in wild areas probably from chippys moving them around... There's lots of maple, birch and some beach around with young oak Yes turned yellow almost immediately that's why I wanted to video it lol very cool and then took the other 12 second video right after about a min or two to show how yellow it turns Mushrooms are very cool I will check out the mushroom you suggested it sounds about right thanks so much... I have 100s of videos and more photos I'm overwhelmed trying to get them all up with bunnies running around but need to organize and get them off my phone b4 spring really comes here lol Thanks so much for your help
I checked that one out in mushroom expert and I seen lactarius vinaceorufescens man these names lol... It likes white pine in eastern area to the north compared to the other one and gets red staining on the gills and stem... I checked and yes tiny bit of staining there the milk also changes color fast too Thanks for your help narrowing it down... It's a very neat mushroom what do you think? The younger one has much darker cap no rings but I do see them sometimes I think it's the age of the mushroom and moisture levels that bring the rings out more
@@wildedibles819 According to Mushroomexpert you have 3 very similar species: L.chrysorrheus(oak), L.vinaceorufescens(coniferous) and L.maculatipes(oak). Lactarius chrysorrheus is described from Europe but also from North American, whereas L.vinaceorufescens is described from North America. And there is even one identical reported from Asia, it's L.indochrysorrheus. It seems that they all belong to the chrysorrheus group, a group that contains those similar species. This book books.google.pt/books?id=NHhyDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT75 has a key for chrysorrheus and vinaceorufescens and they are separated also based on the tree… and if there is or not reddish-brown stains. In fact your mushroom seem to have those brownish stains, so maybe it would be better classified as L.vinaceorufescens. Are there coniferous also between those broad-leaved trees?
@@FindInNature yes more coniferous in this area than broad leaf trees... Balsam, spruce and mixed pine white, scotch pine and red I think... Some hemlock too There popular and birch mixed in higher more maple and beach
This one will eventually go into a vase shape but it's a more meaty one... We get so many different ones here but this ones pretty neat I was not expecting yellow milk... Thanks bud
It's maybe Lactarius chrysorrheus.
At first it looked brownish and cream like the Lactarius quietus that I found recently (it's in one of my videos)... but L.quietus tend to have a longer stem, and the milk is white and doesn't turn yellow. When I was trying to ID the L. quietus I found some similar species then. Lactarius rufus is similar to L.quietus but has also white milk. Another one similar is Lactarius decipiens, this one has white milk that turns yellow, but is said to be a slow process (about 10 minutes)... The milk of your specimen turns yellow almost instantaneously. There is one Lactarius that has white milk that turns yellow in just 5 to 15 seconds. It's Lactarius chrysorrheus. It might be what you found. The habitat of L.chrysorrheus is with oak. That's not the leaves we see in the ground though (were there oak trees?). However some sources say that it is also Mycorrhizal with other broadleaf trees. The L.chrysorrheus may also present concentric bands on the cap (you might want to check too if any your specimens had it). If that is the species you found, it's poisonous, I never found it myself.
Very cool sometimes I see bands but the moisture has to be right
We have oaks in peoples yards but not big ones in our wild spaces but little ones are popping up in wild areas probably from chippys moving them around... There's lots of maple, birch and some beach around with young oak
Yes turned yellow almost immediately that's why I wanted to video it lol very cool and then took the other 12 second video right after about a min or two to show how yellow it turns
Mushrooms are very cool
I will check out the mushroom you suggested it sounds about right thanks so much... I have 100s of videos and more photos I'm overwhelmed trying to get them all up with bunnies running around but need to organize and get them off my phone b4 spring really comes here lol
Thanks so much for your help
I checked that one out in mushroom expert and I seen lactarius vinaceorufescens man these names lol... It likes white pine in eastern area to the north compared to the other one and gets red staining on the gills and stem... I checked and yes tiny bit of staining there the milk also changes color fast too
Thanks for your help narrowing it down... It's a very neat mushroom what do you think?
The younger one has much darker cap no rings but I do see them sometimes I think it's the age of the mushroom and moisture levels that bring the rings out more
@@wildedibles819 According to Mushroomexpert you have 3 very similar species: L.chrysorrheus(oak), L.vinaceorufescens(coniferous) and L.maculatipes(oak).
Lactarius chrysorrheus is described from Europe but also from North American, whereas L.vinaceorufescens is described from North America. And there is even one identical reported from Asia, it's L.indochrysorrheus. It seems that they all belong to the chrysorrheus group, a group that contains those similar species.
This book books.google.pt/books?id=NHhyDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT75 has a key for chrysorrheus and vinaceorufescens and they are separated also based on the tree… and if there is or not reddish-brown stains. In fact your mushroom seem to have those brownish stains, so maybe it would be better classified as L.vinaceorufescens. Are there coniferous also between those broad-leaved trees?
@@FindInNature yes more coniferous in this area than broad leaf trees... Balsam, spruce and mixed pine white, scotch pine and red I think... Some hemlock too
There popular and birch mixed in higher more maple and beach
@@FindInNature I love learning more about the relationship with the trees thanks for the book reference sounds like a good one :)
Oo...a beautiful mushroom 🍄
My favorite ❤
You are the Mushroom Whisperer!
Cheers
Beautiful I thought it was a drink it looks so yummy
Fantastic video ❤❤❤
@@birdsmariaandsunshinetv9899 thank you I appreciate it much love xoxox
Very interesting. Would it be possible for you to tell me in what area you are located?
@@MushroomJourneys-et9gk almaguin highlights area
In between North Bay and Huntsville
Ontario Canada
Yep they look totally different than the ones I find here, mine are more vase shaped like a chantarelle and stay white when bleeding the latex. Neat o
This one will eventually go into a vase shape but it's a more meaty one... We get so many different ones here but this ones pretty neat I was not expecting yellow milk... Thanks bud
@@wildedibles819 Me either, they usually just bleed white...at least here anyhow. You are welcome