Intro to Field Mycology
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- Опубліковано 14 січ 2022
- An episode long demanded by you, the audience, Crime Pays But Mycology Doesn't emerges with an intro into fundamentals of field mycology, aka "going around lurking in the woods and looking for fruiting bodies of fungi". With the help of the friendly and kind mycologist Alan Rockefeller, we use a field trip to look for the type locality of a small saprotrophic mushroom species (Pseudobaeospora deckeri) to help explain some of the things to consider when in the field looking for mushrooms, as well as some of the more complex intricacies o genetic sequencing and differences between "old world"(European) and New World (American) species of fungi that are in the same genus. Almost all photos by Alan Rockefeller.
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Thanks, GFY. - Наука та технологія
The greatest sentence I have ever heard and said so calmly too: “They can save you with a liver transplant but a new liver is about $800,000 with instillation.”
mine is "what woulld happen if you did a line of these spores?"
Money is the least of your problems in that situation.
They have to find a matching liver within a few days and livers don't grow on trees. Probably not gonna happen in time.
Uncle Xi has a Uyghur liver available in 24hours.....
@@dasja9966 it's no joke either, my father had a friend who got some bad mushrooms. he survived, but was never the same after that. if he had more than a couple of drinks Dr Jekle would turn into Mr Hyde. I remember playing a benefit, and he was on lead guitar, he launched into this amazing solo... problem was, we were trying to transition to another song... he was able to COMPLETELY ignore what everyone else was doing and play his own thing, but he only did that after a couple of drinks. fortunately, the audience never noticed and we closed our set with that. another time he showed up at our house at 9pm on a weekday, already drunk, and my father had to kick him out at 11pm, because we both had to work the next morning. He sat in the driveway and howled like a dog...! That was the last straw for my father, and he was no longer welcome.
There is another treatment that can help save the liver. It’s an extract of milk thistle seed called silibinin. The amatoxin poisons you twice. The first time, it goes through the gut and makes you feel like shit. Then it gets absorbed and somehow passed through the gut again (I don’t know the exact mechanism). People who suffer amatoxin poisoning get a temporary reprieve before the second round of symptoms. On the second pass, it gets into the liver, and if you don’t have some top notch kidneys, the liver is probably toast. Silibinin prevents the reuptake of the toxin. Some doctors have had tremendous success with it, saving six out of seven poisoned family members without the need for transplants.
Jeez nothing is more satisfying than hearing an expert speak
it's not their expertise, it's their passion
@@chronicalcultivation It's both, passion lubricates the reception of expertise
If it wasn't for Alan alot of us civilian mycologists wouldn't exist. He's paved the way. Mush love ❤
OMG Mush love thats tooo good I love it
Type locality is massively underrated, especially by youtube "expert foragers" who will tell you somethings edible but don't even bother to tell you what country they're in.
Never mind the thing that scares me: environmentally specific toxins. Amanita have different ratios of ibotenic acid to muscimol just depending on time of year.
So glad Alan is back on the channel. The tour of his lab was incredible
@@ericpeterson4038 very true at least r/mycology is a solid community
Alan’s lab was the video that brought me to Crime Pays
Yep, lab tour was inspirational 👍👍
Poison Control has Alan on speed dial, he's like a superhero.
You can say that again. The man will be a legend simply based on his research into psilocybin containing fungi. He will be like Stamets and McKenna
Minor point of clarification: The type locality for Pseudobaeospora deckeri is actually on the UC Santa Cruz campus (But that exact mycelium seems to have died or disappeared).
The man himself!!!! Yeah we realized that later this night but I forgot to put it in the captions.
So many mushrooms on that campus... when I went there I could just pick edible mushrooms in between classes.
Mushroom picking is huge here in czech republic. Alot of people go with their families and you see people out picking mushrooms all the time. Its kind if a national pastime
Classic example of mycophilic vs mycophobic cultures
@@VickyDPi Good pun
No so much here in Florida tho. We get lot of them but there toixic and or landscap is vary wild , wet and dangerous so harvesting of mushroom is not really things.
As a fellow Oaklander I really appreciate your content. I’ve spent so many hours walking along the train tracks in and around oakland, always distracted by the general filth, misery and poverty (not to mention innovative shanty architecture, I mean - I love it here, but you know how it is) - but the other day for the first time I was excited to walk and stop and look at all the plants I could find along the way. Thanks for sharing your knowledge sparking a new way to look at the world around me and put a little more joy into the madness of Oakland life.
Keep voting in democrats lol
@@BryanHocking how about I lay with your mother on her left side to giver her a better child than you ever will be?
@@BryanHocking be like a mushroom and eat shit
I've had many, many cops tell me that they can't tell whether or not you're wearing seatbelt if they're in their car. So surprise, they were lying. They pulled him over because he had a California license plate, as you said, Joey.
Also the dog trick, they can just get the dog to do the trick on command so it doesn't matter what he smells.
Theres seat belt cameras these days
@@wes4192 The average American is on a surveillance camera 238 times a week. So I don't doubt that seat belt cams are here.
@@capturedflame Are you guys done doing the dozens now? Good!
P.S. Seatbelts don't do their job a significant amount of the time.
"According to the NHTSA, approximately 3 million injuries and 40 thousand fatalities are reported each year from seat belts that fail to perform as expected during motor vehicle collisions. During rollover accidents, failed seatbelts are one of the leading causes of serious injury or death." Nov 8, 2019
Keep hanging out with Alan and joining him on these mushroom hunts! Super interesting stuff!
Old carpets in the woods are usually from discarded dead pets that were wrapped inside. Very commonly buried in shallow graves and dug up by scavengers.
Interesting, never heard of that tradition.
I thought they were sometimes left from people finding a spot for picnics and hanky panky who didn’t bother to clean up after themselves.
My dad has left a couple of those during my life.
Yeah I've come across a lot of dead dogs digging trenches for waterlines in people's back yards.
I really enjoy these long-form style interviews with such knowledgeable people, thanks!
That 'odd texture to the cap' at 18:22 is a partly healed feast had by a rodent, most likely a chipmunk, perhaps a squirrel. You can see the marks left by the rodents incisors. The mushroom was much younger at the time it was nibbled. I often look for these marks in the wild to determine which mushrooms are part of the local diet. This and which mushrooms are stored in the branches of trees for winter consumption.
I was thinking maybe an insect had eaten into it, but I think you're right. Those do look like rodent incisor bite marks.
Alan is doing such great work. I’ve learned so much from watching his PowerPoint lectures. Thank you for making this video.
where do you find his PowerPoint lectures??
@@robbiel296 I just searched Alan’s name on UA-cam. He has done presentations for a number of mycological society functions that are super interesting. Enjoy!
@@Cylindropuntia awesome! I'm gonna check those out thanks!
Glad to see the mycology on this channel!
You got me onto Alan Rockefeller in the first place and now I'm starting to get into fungi foraying myself, always love to see a new myco vid
Kinda funny, just the opposite here. I got turned on to this channel CPBBD a few years ago through Alan Rockefeller when he posted pics of some Psilocybe sp Joey found growing in the bay area near an apartment building under some horticultural atrocity. One of my favorite channels now. It's always great when these two pair up for a video.
Just the visual of Allen with the cops....wife and I laughed for 5 minutes!!!
Hell yeah! I’d like to suggest weekly Tony and Alan episodes.
So far the Alan episodes are fucking gold. And to learn that magic mushrooms thrive around human disturbance is super fascinating. It's like they want us to eat 'em nice! I gotta give it a go here at some point.
Yeeee some more tips and tricks for uploading to inaturalist! Alan going above and beyond with those composite images and lighting. What presentation.
Santa Cruz CA has a fungus fair every January, with mushroom experts behind a long table, ready to tell you what's in your basket. One year I had a short, squat mushroom I could not find in my book. The mycologist turned it around in his hand a moment, smelled it, then touched it with the tip of his tongue and handed it back to me with its name. It was a few years ago and my notes are lost, but I was deeply impressed that the peppery-ness on his tongue made him sure of his identification. Another year I brought in a lilac-colored "witch's butter" I found that got the whole table of experts excited. Love the world of mushrooms! Thanks for this great video!
An hour with Alan Rockefeller ! Thank you!!!
I am absolutely loving this, thank you
Id definitely love to see more content about mycology
A man of mystery... driving about with fungi on his auto's dash.
"You tell me the police lied to you ?" 😄Precious
Nice vid bro, lots of infos and beauty Thank you for the "microbial landscape" New collars as well, very cool
Ya gotta try to get that body cam!!! What a chuckle fest that would be. You gave the agents an education that day. I like the term "fungarium", it's nice.
Many thanks guys, I would love for a compassionate mycologist to help an old grandma in Georgia as they restrict my access to confirmed spores 😔
Thank Y'all for your efforts.
Yes! I was so hoping you would do a mushroom episode. Alan has confirmed some of my observations on iNaturalist. How cool!
very excited to see more mushroom videos. thanks for the upload and thanks to Alan.
I experienced hatching insects in a spice container (Togarashi). I looked it up on the internet, and it gave me the advice for freezing. Good thing to know...
Alan has me rolling 😂 So glad y'all recording some chatter & fostering mycology
I've eaten those purple ones at the end of your video when i was young, was skeptical when i found them growing under our hedge but my dad picked them & fried them up for us assuring me they were good to eat, Bluets he called them here.
Psilocybe is our constant companion like flies, cockroaches, and mice. But more fun.
@FilthyDankWastemanFabuless careful, we can't just have people out there having fun with their lives, they're harder to control and that makes the rest of us feel unsafe.
Thank you so much Tony..I was hoping you would do an episode like this..
Alan is so smart an has booksmart to explaining..
You are street smart an have street style of explanation..
Alan is actually self taught
I will take as many of these as you guys are willing to do. Love this shit.
Thank you Alan, you're amazing. Thanks Tony. Thanks beautiful doggies for watching over the humans.
Thank you for this. More mycology with Alan soon please
Saw Alan post about this episode coming been very excited
This guy is the Bubbles of Mycology. Love it.
Amazing episode. Thank you.
"So you're like a mushroom fluffer..." -Tony For Pres, 2024
YESS MORE ALAN! fuck yeah dude my xmas dreams came true, what a great distraction from the living hell of late capitalism
Speaking of mushroom herbariums, I recently got one that is a collection of European and Japanese prints. It’s called Mushroom Botanical Art by Toshimitsu Fukihara. A beautiful and fascinating book!
It’s hard to distill how much I enjoyed those 52 minutes. A huge respect and thanks for both of your skills and insight. That was the video of 2022 on UA-cam already. Keep em coming! ❤️🍄❤️
You and this guy are a wealth of knowledge..
Thank you! Your jokes and observations help me memorize this life saving info!
Hi Tony and Alan....have microscope will travel...very cool.😊
Thank you for your educational yet entertaining videos. You’re a real fun guy
I am my own type locality, and it follows me wherever I go.
Yours and Alan's knowledge a wealth of information.
Great work Tony ✌
up here in the temperate rain forest, anything left on the dash overnight would get that characteristic green slime patina.
thanks Tony, unbelievably interesting
Mushroom ink. Something I would draw with.
Thanks for the mycology primer, after 3-4 years of doing pretty much everything else (botany, ornithology, chiropterology, entomology, plant galls) I felt a little bad not knowing any mycology and started getting into that as a new year resolution. It's a little overwhelming though, far more exacting for identification than birding or most botany I've ever done. I probably won't ever reach your friend's level of dedication (I work at a molecular biology lab and we're barely just geared as well as he is for gene sequencing haha) but if in the near future I can get down to the family or genus for most specimens and can recognise the easy species you can tell with the naked eye or a hand lens I'll already be very happy. Anyway cheers and good travels out there Tony.
I love these vids my man
MY DUDES FUCK YES ALAN AND TONY BACK AT AGAIN
Love it! You two make a great show!
Always a joy to see Alan, hope it isn't too long till his next visit on the channel!
This is so cool! This makes me wanna to go out mushroom hunting. I'll have to wait until it gets warmer here in MN though
So good. Thanks buddy.
Completely fascinating. Thank you very much for what you and Alan are doing.
Brilliant video, thank you both!
Killer timing. I just joined my local mushroom hunting club. Giddy up. Also thanks for the stickers bud.
Thank you for sharing! I'm trying to get into the field and I've lived in the Bay for most of my life, the work you and Alan do is really inspiring.
Love your sense of humor and how informative you are.
I love learning from you guys
Honestly your whole channel has been pushing me to be more aware and knowledgeable about the natural world around me, thanks for what you're doing and keep up the good work!
Both you and Alan inspired me to get into amateur creeping-around-in-the woods-and-medians for fungi a few years ago, was super stoked you released this. Really nice to see his process for collection and getting those awesome photos.
This might be the best duo! I love the videos! 🔥
Absolutely wonderful video!!
This is awesome and I love it.
thank you alan for coming back on!!
Ahhh, yeah!! Cheers for this! Love seeing you guys talking about Mycology. Dashboard dehydrator for the win. All the best, from the Southern Oregon Coast. 🍄❤️🙏
I’ve been waiting for so long, thank you
Good stuff, thanks chaps.
MORE WITH ALAN PLS, these are easily the best videos with him out there.
This is your best video!!! Thank you!
Amazing episode, Love it
I could watch this for 10 hours. So good.
What a cool and refreshing channel!!! Love the attitude and the way you present information. Im pretty lost on all the scientific jargon, but the questions along with the added descriptive visual captions made things relatively easy to follow along with.
Great video, Subscribed!
My favorite collaboration. Nice.
Finally! Been waiting ona Collab in Alan's territory. -Rhett😁
Wonderful video. Thank you.
Amazing! Glad someone else saw it live.
Another awesome upload 👍
What a treat 🙂
I very much enjoy your recent mycology videos
Another banger! Finally broke down and got over myself, supported... Bought some hoodies and long sleeves. Quality is top notch!
Thank you!
So much FUN, guys!
beautiful documentation... Alan can add ARTIST to his resume.
just gorgeous photographs - thanks for sharing!
I once entertained the idea of mycology as a hobby, identifying local edible mushrooms. My GF reminded me of the time I put diesel in my gas car by mistake because my attention to details can lag at times. Given the potential for pesky side effects like death, I figured it was a good move to just buy them at a local farm stand.
Amazing photos, what a treat
Thanks Allan!
SO COOL! I love watching your channel.
Awesome video.
great video, such a cool way to photograph on the ground with the light and the stacked images
On the way back from Maine once we got pulled over..the mint drying on the dashboard
was in question. I made him smell it. I love to listen to this guy. Glad you have him on again.
awesome! again! thank you
I've gotten to meet alan twice. awesome guy. attented one of his microscopy workshops ! lots of fun
So interesting and educational