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Edibility
Inedible
Lookalike Danger
1 / 5
Habitat
🍂 Mulched gardens, leaf litter
Season
Jul – Oct
"Eastern North America’s answer to the European stinkhorn — cleaner-edged cap, smoother stalk. Named for 19th-c. Carolina botanist H. W. Ravenel."
This species is found with or partners with the following hosts. Ectomycorrhizal hosts (green border) form a root-level partnership; ericoid / arbutoid shrubs (purple border) share the same mycorrhizal networks.

Decomposing leaf and needle litter on the forest floor — substrate for blewit, aniseed funnel, earthstar, and many coral mushrooms.

Landscape hardwood chip mulch — wine cap, bird’s nest fungi, dog-vomit slime mold. A great backyard cultivation substrate.
Eastern North America's most common stinkhorn. Named for 19th-century South Carolina botanist Henry William Ravenel. Cleaner-edged cap and a smoother stalk than Phallus impudicus, with a milder smell.
Mulched gardens, leaf litter, and rotting wood across the eastern US from Maine to Florida and west to the Mississippi. Fruits July through October.

Min Soil Temp
60°F
Moisture Need
rain 0.5in 7d
Drought Tolerance
moderate
Elevation Range
0–6,684 ft
Cap edge is more ragged on impudicus; both species are non-toxic.
Smaller, orange-pink, no veil — clearly different.
Mulched gardens, leaf litter
Photograph it and log your observation on iNaturalist. The community can help confirm your ID — always get confirmation before eating.