Spores often truncate.
(24.8) 27.5 - 34.2 (37.4) × (11.5) 12.1 - 13.3 (13.5) µm
Q = (2) 2.1 - 2.7 (3) ; N = 15
Me = 30.9 × 12.8 µm ; Qe = 2.4
With large guttles at the poles averaging 5um in width. Smaller guttules present.
Near shore pine
Growing in a humid (95%) terrarium with mixed hardwood leaves, bark, splinters, and other forest litter collected from nearby forests probably 9 weeks ago. Seems to be growing out of a very rotten chunk of wood overgrown with moss and liverwort. Primary specimen is 2cm tall, 2-3mm wide cap. Light colored gills. In photos 1 and 2 you can see a little baby popping up on its left.
Stipe seems noticeably scaly, this leads me to thinking G. paludosa may be the best match that the algorithm offered but these little brown terrarium mushrooms are so tough to ID. Maybe I'll get some spores under a microscope soon.
Mushrooms growing in this same terrarium:
1) https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/199958884
2) https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/198761646
3) https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/200873535
4)
Singular fruiting body growing from the ground in a mixed conifer and pine forest with madrone nearby.
Striate red cap with darkened center with yellow margin,
Stipe is yellow at base an darkens upward and has nattering,
Decurrent, white gills,
Growing in mossy duff off trail,
Near redwood/cascara,
White UV on gills,
No odor/taste
Spores ellipsoid, smooth, translucent. Fruiting under duff layer, directly on woody debris.
Maybe. . red spots on gills of older one.
asexual morph of Isarioid Cordyceps sp
Sequenced.
Sample: S-3-1
Collector: HS, NW
Microscopy: HS
Notes: Canopy dominated by tanoak, Oregon myrtle, redwood, red alder, with minimal Doug fir. No hemlocks noted in plot data. When fresh: pinkish orange hue with white tips, no green hues noted. Spores elongate, pale yellow, minutely roughened. KOH: dark red on base of branches. Entire sporocarp is severely desiccated and rhizomorphic. Matches type specimens for both R. tsugina and R. apiculata var. brunnea.