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piptoporus quercinas


sean
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So i was walking along and came across a big old vet oak and i thought to myself 'that hollowed trunk looks a prime site for the elusive oak polypore'. On investigating further, to my astonishment there she lay! (i think):sneaky2:

 

pic 1 is upper surface and 2 and 3 underneath.

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Nice one sean, thanks for posting.

 

Do you know how many occurances there's been so far this year at Richmond?

 

 

Very jealous :thumbup1:

 

Shame you can't spell it properly. Especially such a rare one n'all. :001_tt2:

 

 

 

 

 

Does that answer your Q, Mr B :001_rolleyes:

 

 

.

Edited by Monkey-D
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We hadn't collectively got enough images for a gallery.

But that appears to be changing :biggrin:

 

Bio images has it as.........

 

Piptoporus quercinus (Schrad.) P. Karst., 1881 (Oak Polypore)

 

Collins also agrees.

 

As does WAB

 

But you do see it around the web as Piptoporus quercinas

 

 

 

 

.

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So...........after a false dawn at the whip, and then sean out funging me, I took to the trail to hone in on the elusive little quercinus.

 

Armed with 18 recorded spots (frdbi 2009) from 4 different sites at Epping, me & the boys then went a hunting.

 

Upshot was, that we were a little late for the show. :sad:

 

Found three of the above trees (though some tags not survived) had fruited this year.

 

One in a hollowed out fallen pollard, one (completely desicated) on a standing live pollard & 4 (desicated) on a standing dead pollard.

 

Not particularly aesthetic shots, but interesting to me in terms of context/habitat etc

 

Will get out a bit earlier next year me thinks :001_rolleyes:

 

 

first one.........

 

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