This record is a continuation of a long term project on the part of the New York Mycological Society to record the fungi in New York City. The New York Mycological Society visits parks in the five boroughs of New York City year-round and has recorded over 1,500 species.
This record is a continuation of a long term project on the part of the New York Mycological Society to record the fungi in the areas beyond New York City. This project pertains only to counties visited by NYMS outside of NYC proper, which include Rockland, Orange, Westchester, Putnam, and Dutchess counties in NY state and Bergen, Essex, and Passaic counties in NJ.
This is an iNat project that tracks all observations that were made on NYMS walks that were subsequently sequenced, either through FunDiS or privately.The purpose of this project is to make it easy to track what was sequenced and what the results were.This project does not contain observations that were made by NYMS members on their own outings, eg during the pandemic.Observations can be added by anyone if they were a) made during a NYMS club walk and b) have sequencing results attached to them
How to use iNaturalist
Joining and using iNaturalist for your own and the club’s benefit is easy. iNat can be used on your phone or on your computer. Both methods have pros and cons and many members find themselves using a combination of both.
1Sign up for iNaturalist
Either download the iNaturalist app and create a user id and password on the app, or Sign up via their regular website https://www.inaturalist.org/signup.
2Join the club’s projects
NYMS has Four projects on iNat:
Fungi of NYC
You must join the project for your observations to be included
GeoTagged for the 5 bouroughs
Fungi beyond NYC – New York Mycological Society
You must join the project for your observations to be included
GeoTagged
Slime Molds of NYC
Any research grade Myxomycete will automatically be added
GeoTagged for the 5 bouroughs
NYMS Sequenced Collections
Only observations that have been DNA seqeuenecd
GeoTagged for the 5 bouroughs
Once you’re registered and logged in on iNat would be great if you could join these projects. This will allow you to add your finds to our collective database that helps us track what members find on – and off – our walks.
Joining a project on the app (iPhone)
Click on ‘More’ at the bottom right hand corner of the screen, then click on ‘Projects’ on the next screen, then search for our projects (see above). Click ‘Join Project’.
Joining a project from a regular computer
From the main page navigate to Projects, which is under the Community tabSearch for and click on one of the above projects. Then click on ‘Join this project’. You are now a project member.
3Documenting a find
Via the iNaturalist app
Best for documenting finds right there in front of you. If you’d rather upload your finds later (or manipulate your images before uploading) you can do that with the app too or on a regular computer.
Find a mushroom
Open the app
Click on ‘Observe’ – the camera icon
Take a picture with the green button
Take another picture (eg of the underside or back) by clicking on the plus sign
Look at the species that the algorithm suggests under the “What did you see?” field. If nothing looks right, type in the name of the species that you think you’ve found. If you’re not sure what it is, type in something more general like ‘fungi’ or ‘polypore’ and choose the option that pops up. The location data will be added automatically.
Then click on ‘projects’ (towards the bottom, just above the green Share button).
Slide the slider next to the project you want to add to to the right
Share your find with the green ‘share’ button
Documenting your finds at home via the app
This is the best option if you like the easy interface of the app but don’t want to burn bandwith by uploading a lot of pictures in the field, or if you prefer to upload observations later, not while collecting. It also allows you to crop or otherwise edit your images before uploading.
Take pictures of the fungi you find with your phone’s camera. Once at home open the app, click ‘Observe’ but instead of taking a picture with the green button click on the picture icon on the bottom right and import one picture after another from your phone’s camera roll.
Documenting your finds at home via a desktop computer
Log into iNaturalist.com
Click on the green Upload button on the top right
Drag and drop or choose a picture of a mushroom that you want to upload
Add another picture via the Add button on the top left
Click on ‘Select All’ then ‘Combine’ to combine both images into a single observation
Click into the field next to the loupe icon to see what species the algorithm suggests. If nothing looks right, write in what you think it is, or write something general like ‘fungi’ and choose it when it pops up
Submit your observation by clicking on the green submit button at the top right.
4Tapping into the power of iNat
iNat lets you keep track of your finds, so it’s easier to memorize what you saw and what it looked like.
It will help you re-find interesting places where you collected interesting (or tasty) fungi in the past.
When you click on the name of a mushroom it will show you a map of its distribution, the time of year it’s found, how often it’s been found
and images from other people’s finds.
If you put a name on something you find, people can either confirm it and make it ‘Research Grade’ or they can provide a different or more
specific name and improve the quality of your entry. A great feature for entries where you are not sure what you’ve found.
You can search specific areas for specific fungi, by writing in a name (eg ‘morchella’) into the Explore box and it will show you all morels
in the area of your search sorted by recency.
You can follow other users – or a location, or a species. They’ll show up in your home page if you access iNat via desktop (not the app).
Visiting the club’s project pages you can see what has been found most recently, or most frequently.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. By using this website you agree to our Data Protection Policy.
Opt-out complete; your visits to this website will not be recorded by the Web Analytics tool. Note that if you clear your cookies, delete the opt-out cookie, or if you change computers or Web browsers, you will need to perform the opt-out procedure again.
You may choose to prevent this website from aggregating and analyzing the actions you take here. Doing so will protect your privacy, but will also prevent the owner from learning from your actions and creating a better experience for you and other users.
The tracking opt-out feature requires cookies to be enabled.