- Beauveria sp. growing out of a mall grasshopper
- Ophiocordyceps on odontomachus ant seen in Isla Escondida
- Hyperdermium sp. with possibly its anamorph or a secondary parasite growing out of the old fruiting body. Hyperdermium is a Cordyceps relative in the Hypocreales seen near Pitalito
- Cordyceps (aka Isaria) tenuipes anamorph. Most of the conidiospores already were dispersed from moving the specimen for the photo. seen in Pitalito
- Ophiocordyceps unilateralis seen in Mocoa
- Ant hyperparasit seen in Mocoa
- Ophiocordyceps engleriana fruiting on spider, note the legs, in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- A past prime Ophiocordyceps binata with hyperparasite
- Cordyceps caloceroides on a Tarantula in situ near Pitalito
- Ophiocordyceps amazonica seen in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- Cordyceps nidus growing from a small spider seen in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- Gibellula pulchra growing from a tiny spider in Mocoa. Fitting species name: "pulchra" meaning beautiful in Latin. However a spider might miss the beauty aspect in a Gibellula infection.
- Ophiocordyceps binata seen in Mocoa
- fertile head of Ophiocordyceps evansii seen in Isla Escondida. This and parasitizing species was previously clustered with O. australis, which has a round head.
Tatiana Sanjuan named this species in honor of Harry Evans, who has worked a lot on Cordyceps. - Ophiocordyceps melolonthae giant larva excavated . Meloloantha include the European Maybug and its Chafer larva
- Detail of the gorgeous stromata of Beauveria sp. on small grasshopper
- Beauveria sp. on a small grasshopper, Isla Escondida
- A moth having a real bad case of Cordyceps tuberculata, the telemorph of what was formerly known as Akanthomyces pistillariiformis'
- Cordyceps polyartha, aka Isaria polyartha in Isla Escondido, Putumayo
- Cordyceps sp. growing from a Lepidoptera larva, Isla Escondido, Putumayo