Saturday, 26 March 2022

Alder Bracket, Mensularia radiata I think

 

Very old, broken down Alder Bracket at the corner of Dene Park where the pipe inlet is, and there is a small collection of tall Black Alder trees by the side of the stream. The remnants of the brackets were exactly where the books predicted, on a dead standing Alder trunk. One of the photos in the TMA Fungi App is quite similar. However this identification was largely based on eliminating other possibilities - in other words, "what else could it be"?

The caps are more or less correct, assuming that the pores beneath have been largely eroded (worn away), and the confluence of the remaining material looks fairly typical, The flesh of the annual brackets is said to be at first soft, but becomes hard, woody and red-brown as the brackets age, as I have assumed is the case here.

The name has been regularly changed and Inonotus radiatus is still very commonly used in the reference books. The BMS recognises it as Mensularia radiatus. TMA Fungi has it, somewhat unusually, in its latest iteration, Xanthoporia radiata (Sowerby) P. Karst. 


Could this be a much less decayed version, on a nearby trunk, or is it something else entirely? 


(confirmed at the end of October, when fresher)

 




Sunday, 20 March 2022

Lumpy Brackets and Smoky Brackets at Ellington Park, Ramsgate

 

This appears to be Trametes gibbosa, the Lumpy Bracket, on a stump at Ellington Park, Ramsgate. Identified, with "some trepidation" through the ID apps, but it does look very possible. 


 

To my surprise, this appears to be very well developed brackets of Bjerkandera adusta, Smoky Bracket, on the large branch of an unknown tree in Ellington Park.




Sunday, 13 March 2022

Junghuhnia (Steccherinum) nitidum

 

The colour of fresh crusts is a fairly distinctive salmon-pink. Perhaps the colour deepens to a light brick red if left to age? Older or damaged crusts may also perhaps be an angrier orange? The white margins are said to be persistent, and quite substantial and clear, sometimes a bit fringed apparently. Should be easily separable from its substrate according to Lassoe and Peterson, but not Kibby, who says it is firmly attached.

The pores are often angular or even labyrinthine, but usually look quite evenly spaced in my very limited experience. Sometimes angled if growing on upright or angled wood, perhaps gradually turning somewhat lacerated. Found on a wide range of fallen or still-attached dead deciduous wood. This looks as if it could be on Beech. As it dries it should turn from soft to brittle.

I've now found it a couple of times in Dene Park, while Hugill and Lucas have it as uncommon, 5 - 7 pores per mm with a somewhat musty smell they claim, which I haven't checked. 




Sunday, 27 February 2022

Radulomyces molaris or Basidioradulum radula or Phlebia

 

Well, Crust ID was never going to be easy. Jasper says Radulomyces and Basidioradulum are macromorphologically indistinguishable, so I am still stuck, apart from my gut feeling, purely from on-line photos, that what I am usually finding is Radulomyces molaris, so should be on oak, as this might well be, as its in the oak compartment close to the car park..  












Fallen Beech at Eastry Picnic site a couple of days later





Sunday, 30 January 2022

Dene Park fungi

 

Stereum sanguinolentum on the Douglas Fir in the car park. I think the browner crusts are younger ones, and that they will grey up in a few weeks or months. It would be great to check !



Sunday, 2 January 2022

A few fungi from Fox Wood

 

There were a few fungi along the path into Fox Wood, including this Hornbeam trunk with some quite extensive but largely dried up crusts of the Silverleaf Fungus, Chondrostereum purpureum. The crusts were partly resupinate, partly reflexed. The effect was very similar to Stereum crusts, and that was what I thought I had found, but one thing that struck me at the time was the obviously whitish upper surface visible on the reflexed portions. This was reasonably hairy but the hairs were still obviously white. Stereum species upper surfaces are generally grey to brown, or rather darkened. 

A couple of what appeared to be more recent crusts were distinctly more purple in the captured images (below) than to the eye, and when I saw the final one, it finally clicked that I was looking at Chondrostereum, not a Stereum species. 

When rubbed to check for "bleeding", a dark smear appeared - the dark region below the context possibly?  This was also fairly clearly visible in cross section. The habitat is a reasonable fit - a preference for newly dead wood is mentioned in Laessoe and Peterson, as found here.




A little further on, there was a more obviously decayed trunk of another Hornbeam multistem, with extensive fungal fruiting, in this case I thought of Schizopora paradoxa, the Split Porecrust.


Sunday, 26 December 2021

A few fungi from The Scambles

 

Interesting mushroom on well decaying fallen leg




Fuscoporia species on Hazel



Schizopora paradoxa rather broken down extensive coverage of log
 


Really quite weird apparent attack on the fruiting surface of Schizopora paradoxa, maybe leaving droppings?  





Stereum subtomentosum I reckon.



Surface of unknown crust. Could it be Schizopora again?







Not a bad half an hour?