This was found at Burn’s Bog on the wooden plank bridge trail that goes throughout the bog. It appeared to be attached to the plank of wood alongside some moss and other greenery. This is a gilled mushroom, with a parabolic cap shape, with either a regular or striate cap margin, a smooth cap surface, a subperonate partial veil, long decurrent gill attachment, a narrow breadth of gills with average thickness and subdistant spacing. It has even entire edges, a central, flexuous stem, and it is hard to tell what bulb & volvas it may have as well as the surface. I believe this is a Galerina hypnorum since it matches the morphology characteristics and that species is known to grow with mosses (moss bell)

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