Agent-almanac fungi-identification
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/i18n/wenyan-ultra/skills/fungi-identification" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-fungi-identification-c02672 && rm -rf "$T"
i18n/wenyan-ultra/skills/fungi-identification/SKILL.mdFungi Identification
Identify fungi in the field using morphological features, spore prints, habitat, and season with an absolute safety-first approach.
When to Use
- You encounter an unknown fungus and need to identify it
- You are foraging for edible mushrooms and need to confirm species before consumption
- You want to assess whether fungi in your garden or property are harmful
- You are building field identification skills through structured observation practice
- You need to differentiate an edible species from a dangerous look-alike
Inputs
- Required: A fungus specimen or clear observation of one in situ
- Required: Ability to observe fine morphological details (cap, gills, stem, base)
- Optional: Field guide or reference material for the region
- Optional: Paper and glass for spore prints
- Optional: Knife for cross-section examination
- Optional: Hand lens (10x) for fine detail
Procedure
Step 1: The Cardinal Rule
Before any identification work, internalize the absolute rule of mycology.
CARDINAL RULE: If you are not 100% certain of the identification, DO NOT EAT IT. There is no "universal edibility test" for mushrooms. Some deadly species taste pleasant. Some deadly species have delayed symptoms (24-72 hours). Some deadly species have NO antidote. The cost of a false positive (eating a misidentified mushroom) is organ failure and death. The cost of a false negative (skipping an edible mushroom) is a missed meal. ALWAYS ERR TOWARD CAUTION.
Expected: The cardinal rule is internalized before proceeding with identification.
On failure: There is no failure mode for this step. If the rule is not internalized, do not proceed to field identification for consumption purposes.
Step 2: Document the Habitat
Context narrows identification before touching the specimen.
Habitat Recording: +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Factor | Record | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Substrate | Soil, wood (dead/living), dung, leaf | | | litter, moss, other fungi | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Tree association | What trees are within 10m? (Many fungi | | | are mycorrhizal with specific tree genera)| +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Moisture | Dry, damp, wet, waterlogged | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Light | Full shade, dappled, open | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Season | Early spring, late spring, summer, early | | | autumn, late autumn, winter | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Altitude | Lowland, mid-altitude, montane | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+ | Growth pattern | Solitary, scattered, clustered, ring, | | | shelf/bracket | +--------------------+------------------------------------------+
Expected: A complete habitat record that provides context for species-level identification.
On failure: If habitat is unclear (e.g., urban garden with mixed plantings), record what is visible. Incomplete habitat data reduces identification confidence — factor this into the safety assessment.
Step 3: Examine Morphological Features
Systematic examination of the specimen itself.
Morphological Checklist: CAP (Pileus): - Shape: convex, flat, concave, conical, umbonate, bell-shaped - Diameter (measure or estimate) - Surface: smooth, scaly, fibrous, slimy, dry, cracked - Colour (note if colour changes with age or moisture) - Margin: smooth, striate, inrolled, appendiculate (veil remnants) GILLS / PORES / SPINES (Hymenium): - Type: gills (lamellae), pores (tubes), spines (teeth), smooth - Attachment: free, adnexed, adnate, decurrent - Spacing: crowded, close, distant - Colour (important — note changes with age) - Bruising: do gills change colour when damaged? STEM (Stipe): - Height and diameter - Shape: equal, tapered, bulbous, club-shaped - Surface: smooth, fibrous, scaly, reticulate (netted) - Interior: solid, hollow, stuffed (pithy center) - Ring (annulus): present/absent, position, persistent/fragile - Volva (cup at base): present/absent — ALWAYS check by carefully excavating the base (Amanita species have a volva) FLESH (Context): - Colour when cut - Colour change on exposure to air (note time to change) - Texture: firm, brittle, fibrous, gelatinous - Smell: mushroomy, anise, radish, flour, chlorine, unpleasant - Taste: (ONLY if species is confirmed non-deadly by an expert; for unknown species, DO NOT taste) SPORE PRINT: - Remove the stem; place the cap gill-side down on paper (half white, half dark paper to see any colour) - Cover with a glass or bowl to maintain humidity - Wait 4-12 hours - Record spore colour: white, cream, pink, brown, purple-brown, black, rust-orange
Expected: A complete morphological description covering all major features.
On failure: If a feature cannot be observed (e.g., no ring visible but it may have been lost), record it as "not observed" rather than "absent." The distinction matters for identification.
Step 4: Identify Using Multiple Confirmations
Cross-reference all data against reference material.
Identification Protocol: 1. Use habitat + season to narrow to likely genera 2. Use cap shape + gill type + spore colour to narrow to species group 3. Check ALL features against the candidate species description 4. Specifically check against dangerous look-alikes: - Does this species have a deadly doppelganger? - What feature distinguishes the edible from the deadly? - Can I see that distinguishing feature clearly? Confidence Levels: +----------+---------------------------+---------------------------+ | Level | Criteria | Action | +----------+---------------------------+---------------------------+ | Certain | All features match; no | Safe to collect (for | | | look-alike confusion; | experienced identifiers) | | | experienced with species | | +----------+---------------------------+---------------------------+ | Probable | Most features match; | DO NOT eat. Collect for | | | one or two uncertain; | further study (spore | | | look-alike eliminated | print, expert review) | +----------+---------------------------+---------------------------+ | Possible | Some features match; | DO NOT eat. Photograph | | | look-alike not fully | and seek expert opinion | | | eliminated | | +----------+---------------------------+---------------------------+ | Unknown | Cannot narrow to species | DO NOT eat. DO NOT | | | | handle extensively | +----------+---------------------------+---------------------------+
Expected: A species-level identification with explicit confidence level and look-alike assessment.
On failure: If identification stalls at genus level, that is acceptable for learning purposes. For consumption, only species-level "Certain" identification is acceptable.
Validation
- The cardinal rule was acknowledged before starting identification
- Habitat was documented before examining the specimen
- All morphological features were examined systematically
- The base was excavated to check for a volva
- A spore print was taken (if time allows)
- Dangerous look-alikes were explicitly checked and eliminated
- Confidence level was honestly assessed
- Only "Certain" identifications were considered for consumption
Common Pitfalls
- Relying on a single feature: "It looks like a chanterelle" based on colour alone. True chanterelles have false gills (ridges), grow from soil near trees, and have a specific apricot smell. False chanterelles and Jack-o'-lanterns share the colour but differ in every other feature
- Skipping the base examination: Failing to dig up the base misses the volva — the single most important feature for identifying deadly Amanita species (death cap, destroying angel)
- Trusting apps blindly: AI-based mushroom identification apps have significant error rates for look-alike species. Use them as a starting point, never as confirmation
- Assuming "common = safe": Abundance does not indicate edibility. Deadly species can be locally abundant
- Tasting unknown species: Some mycologists use taste as a diagnostic tool, but this requires expert-level knowledge of which species are safe to taste. For non-experts, do not taste unknown fungi
- Ignoring temporal toxins: Some species (e.g., Amanita phalloides) have pleasant taste and delayed symptoms. By the time symptoms appear (24-48 hours), liver damage is severe
Related Skills
— growing known species eliminates identification risk entirelymushroom-cultivation
— complementary field identification skill; shares the multi-feature confirmation methodologyforage-plants