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Posted

Hope you don't mind me adding a few pictures to your collection Hama? :001_smile: I found all these at Corsham Court a year or so ago and forgot all about them :thumbup1:

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Posted
your first shot is a wonderful example of trametes gibbosa, last 2 trametes versicolour

 

And you can add Bjerkandera adusta to this on the second (together with T. versicolor in the middle) and third photo, the annual bracket fungus, on the mycelium of which Trametes gibbosa lives as a parasite.

Posted

Hey Hama can you I'd some fungi for me please?.......I'm just getting the fungi bug and thought I would remember the names(some of which I can hardly pronounce)if I learn't them as I found them.

 

Cheers Steve

Posted
Hey Hama can you I'd some fungi for me please?.......I'm just getting the fungi bug and thought I would remember the names(some of which I can hardly pronounce)if I learn't them as I found them.

 

Cheers Steve

 

I will of course do my best, although i might suggest posting them in Kiezers Q and A thread, he is after all infinatley more qualified than I:blushing:

Posted

Having just got back from a few days in the Dartmoor area on the ATF (ancient tree forum) summer meeting) I thought I would post a few, though there really isnt that much around at the moment being a very dry year (even on dartmoor with its average of 2 metres of rain per annum!) It is so dry in fact that many of the bryophytes are looking rather stressed too.

 

First up is what I suspect to be Ganoderma australe (suspected due to type of failure and nature of scenario) AKA the southern bracket, a common fungi amoung the old beeches and one of the prime pathogens of old beech, along with k. deusta and M. giganteus (arguably).

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Posted
This fungi is unkown to me though was common on dung upon dartmoor. I suspect it is a Hypholoma though uncertain as to its type.

 

Stropharia (= Psilocybe) semiglobata.

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