Thursday, 24 December 2020

Fuscoporia is as close as I can get!

 

In Dene Park I have found quite a bit of Fuscoporia on over-stood dead Sweet Chestnut trunks, which makes it one of the commoner crust fruiting bodies in this woodland. This might raise the question why it isn't mentioned as a host in H & L - except maybe there aren't many Sweet Chestnuts in Hampshire, especially ?


A closer pair of views of the above, maybe suggesting a largely eroded fruiting body, perhaps not the best for microscopy...




In First Nature, only Fuscoporia ferrea is mentioned, and it is said to be common and widespread in the UK as well as Europe. I think there is a general agreement that Fuscoporia ferrea is the more commonly recorded taxon in the UK. Distinguishing the two is likely to be very difficult and some would say based on microscopy alone.  It may be worth checking that the tubes are brown, 2 to 5mm deep in each of 4 to 5 layers, as the tubes seem to be much deeper than that in some of the specimens I have seen; they should also terminate in small roundish red-brown pores spaced 4 to 6 per mm. Kibby on the other hand has the tubes up to 8 mm deep, and concolorous with the pores. What is a beginner supposed to do?

I always find it amazing that despite the bright colours of the fruiting bodies and layers, that the spore print is only white or whitish - it must be difficult to determine of course, as large numbers of spores are required for a print.

Fuscoporia ferrea is mentioned as the cause of a disease of stone fruits in the NBN, but I have found no cross-referenced support.  There is the rather similar Phellinus pomaceus

Distinguishing ferrea from ferruginosa is definitely tricky. In Laessoe and Petersen it suggests that only ferruginosa has setae in the margin. Kibby appears to suggests they are also much larger than the hymenial setae - 300 micrometers - but this is really not implied in Laessoe and Petersen!

On another nearby Sweet Chestnut trunk of over-stood coppice, we may have an example of the false caps mentioned in L & P. Another explanation might be cavities stuffed with brown hyphae -very difficult to interpret! 


 


Tuesday, 22 December 2020

Hairy-felty poroid bracket

 

Brown topped but this dried to a very dull grey-brown because of the very densely felty-hairy surface. The edge was blunt rather than sharp and the under surface was white going to cream with 2 - 5 pores per mm.

The bracket was umbonate with a narrow point of attachment. I wondered whether it was a Trametes species because of the hairiness of the cap.









Monday, 21 December 2020

Stereum gausapatum probably

 

Walking in Fox Wood this muddy and very slippy afternoon, and trying to give Toby as much ball-chasing as possible, just as we came to the start of the upgrade and the spruce plantation near the road, there was a large oak branch down on the ground, about 20 cm diameter and a good 8 m long or more. One large fruiting body of what was most likely to be the Bleeding Oak Crust Stereum gausapatum (Fr.) Fr. was very obvious in its chestnut colour. It reddened consistently when rubbed - top right of the crust in the third image. 





Tuesday, 15 December 2020

Fuscoporia it seems

 

A large spread of this vivid brown crust fruiting body on this fallen branch. It is assumed to be either Fuscoporia ferrea (Pers.) G. Cunn. or Fuscoporia ferruginosa (Schrad.) Murrill. and I think you cannot tell the difference without microscopy.



Schizopora paradoxa perhaps

 

There was a tremendous explosion of a crust on one of the smaller (oak?) trees with well developed flat teeth pointing more or less downwards. It is possible that this is a well developed crust of one of the Schizopora species, possibly the commonest, the Split Pore Crust, Schizopora paradoxa (aka Xylodon paradoxus) (Schrad.) Donk. 

On an angled, but approaching the horizontal, branch:





and again, on a more vertical branch




and on a different upright stem,



Sunday, 13 December 2020

Young Datura mollis, possibly

This is an interesting poroid crust that presents here as neat pads of material with an almost reverse coralloid surface - flat with the irregular pores chased into it. The substrate is a highly decayed and quite soft birch branch. There is a very slight pinkish tinge and I should go back to see if I can get it to bruise pink as well. It resembles some images of Ceriopora excelsa (Lundell) Parmasto, which is also said to be soft and quite easily removable, with only 2 - 3 pores per mm. The pores here are bigger, I couldn't get it to bruise and it wasn't easy to remove from the substrate.







Ted Lapper thinks this might be a young Datronia mollis, the Common Mazegill. He might well be right!

There was another much thinner crust further along the branch:








Monday, 7 December 2020

Stereum ochraceoflavum possibly

 

Off to Hazel Wood towards West Peckham today for a short walk before an on-line judging session for Faversham Trees, Pleased to allow Toby to calmly explore the muddy footpath across the fields, which he clearly enjoyed. In the woods things looked quite promising for fungi. On the left a coppice stool which I think was Sweet Chestnut had one dead stem that was well colonised by a Stereum species.

At eye-level the Stereum looked pretty fresh, but lower down the stem there were many older caps and no fresh ones. It seemed that there was a wave of fruiting moving roughly up the stem. This may or may not be indicative of the progress of fungal colonisation of the stem. 

My first impression was of a pinkish crust, quite resupinate in the early stages, possibly having (retaining?) a more pileate nature in the older looking, dried out and more zonate crusts further down the stem. On looking in more detail the hairiness of the "upper" surface strongly reminded me of Stereum hirsutum, but the crusts looked significantly pinker with no trace of orange tints. The crusts looked thinner in cross section as well. Does Stereum hirsutum ever get as pink as this?




Looking in a bit more detail my first impression was of a pinkish crust, quite resupinate in the early stages, possibly having (retaining?) a more pileate nature in the older looking crusts further down the stem.







The colonisation appears to have been proceeding for a while!


One alternative is a pinkish Stereum hirsutum. I must go back to measure it and check for the black layer.