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Known issue affecting NatureMapr Data Collector mobile app

Platform update (mini)

NatureMapr moves to simpler, flatter national structure

Mobile App update and known issues

Discussion

sangio7 wrote:
4 min ago
another new one for The Pinnacle

Leistomorpha brontoscopa
sangio7 wrote:
13 min ago
A new one for The Pinnacle

Camponotus sponsorum
RogerF wrote:
26 min ago
Vth instar nymph of a fully winged species

Gryllacrididae (family)
RogerF wrote:
30 min ago
It would be worth reporting the pig damage to Bella Hart at LLS Braidwood. isabella.hart@lls.nsw.gov.au

Diuris amabilis
Heinol wrote:
31 min ago
Not a Scleroderma, which belongs with the puffballs & the like. This has a stem with a cap on top. The upper half of the exposed cross-section shows homogenous flesh, but in the lower half of that exposed cross-section you can see what look like a lot of vertical lines. This fungus is a bolete which means that, if you look at the underside of the cap, you’d see a spongy, pored surface. Each pore is the mouth of a tube that extends a little way back into the cap. The tubes are tightly packed and in the lower half of that cross section, what look likes a mass of vertical lines is really a mass of closely-packed tubes, seen in cross section. This bolete has dried out considerably and become distorted . The cap surface might naturally develop those polygonal ‘plates’ – but it is possible that they are an artefact produced by excessive drying, as the drying tissue ruptures. Given the state of this specimen I can say no more than ‘bolete’.

Scleroderma sp.
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