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The 2019 Mushroaming Fungal Fellowship. During a short stop at an old-growth spruce forest we found Netcap King boletes (Boletus reticuloceps), Ochre Himalayan Caesars (Amanita hemibapha var ochracea or now A. ochracea) and Blewits (Lepista cf nuda). Th

Bhutan Mushroamers Tangsibi 2019 Ms.jpg Termitomyces sp. locally known as Bangmu. Photo: Cheku Cr ed DW MsThumbnailsThis Golden-Grey Langur was licking salt right next to the road east of Zhemgang. It should be the rare hybrid between Gee's golden and Capped langur - Trachypithecus geei and T. pileatus.Termitomyces sp. locally known as Bangmu. Photo: Cheku Cr ed DW MsThumbnailsThis Golden-Grey Langur was licking salt right next to the road east of Zhemgang. It should be the rare hybrid between Gee's golden and Capped langur - Trachypithecus geei and T. pileatus.Termitomyces sp. locally known as Bangmu. Photo: Cheku Cr ed DW MsThumbnailsThis Golden-Grey Langur was licking salt right next to the road east of Zhemgang. It should be the rare hybrid between Gee's golden and Capped langur - Trachypithecus geei and T. pileatus.Termitomyces sp. locally known as Bangmu. Photo: Cheku Cr ed DW MsThumbnailsThis Golden-Grey Langur was licking salt right next to the road east of Zhemgang. It should be the rare hybrid between Gee's golden and Capped langur - Trachypithecus geei and T. pileatus.Termitomyces sp. locally known as Bangmu. Photo: Cheku Cr ed DW MsThumbnailsThis Golden-Grey Langur was licking salt right next to the road east of Zhemgang. It should be the rare hybrid between Gee's golden and Capped langur - Trachypithecus geei and T. pileatus.