This is one of nature’s weirder sights—but it’s completely natural.
🍄 What You’re Looking At
This is the “egg stage” of a stinkhorn fungus, likely from the group that includes Mutinus caninus.
🔍 Why It Looks So Strange
- The outer white, cracked layer is a protective shell (called a volva).
- The clear, jelly-like interior is normal—it protects the growing fungus.
- The pink, folded structure inside is the developing mushroom, not an animal or embryo.
It often looks “alien” or like something organic inside because you’re seeing the fungus mid-development.
⏳ What Happens Next
- The egg will split open.
- A tall, unusual mushroom will shoot out quickly (sometimes in hours).
- It will produce a strong, rotting smell to attract flies, which spread its spores.
⚠️ Is It Dangerous?
- Not harmful to touch, but don’t eat it unless properly identified.
- The smell later can be quite unpleasant.
💡 Fun fact: Some stinkhorn “eggs” are actually considered edible before they open in certain cultures—but once mature, they become famous for their terrible odor.
If you’re curious, I can show you what this exact fungus looks like after it opens—it’s even more bizarre than this stage.