Pinkgill
A fungi fungus (Entoloma sinuatum) — Toxic.
Overview
The Pinkgill (Entoloma sinuatum) is a fungi, part of the kingdom Fungi. The species belongs to the broader mushrooms and lichens grouping among the fungi.
Pinkgill fruits across the appropriate habitats within its part of the world. Spore print color is pink. Like other fungi, Pinkgill spends most of its life as an underground or in-wood mycelial network and only produces its visible fruiting bodies under specific conditions of temperature, moisture, and seasonal timing. Learning to find a species reliably is more about reading habitat and weather than walking randomly through the woods.
Edibility is described as Toxic. Foragers should always carry a positive identification and never rely on a single field mark — many edible mushrooms have toxic look-alikes, some deadly, and the consequences of misidentification are serious. Pinkgill plays a specific ecological role — as a decomposer, mycorrhizal partner of forest trees, or parasite of other organisms — and the fungi as a whole are essential to the carbon, nitrogen, and water cycles of forests, meadows, and wetlands.
For mushroom hunters, naturalists, and curious hikers, learning Pinkgill is part of building familiarity with a kingdom that most people walk past every day without noticing. Fungi are everywhere in healthy outdoor places, and they reward close attention with some of the most beautiful, strange, and ecologically important organisms in any landscape.