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Posted
heres another that is a mystery to me:001_huh:

 

[ATTACH]63212[/ATTACH]

 

seems weird you posting fungi piccies and asking what they are...:001_smile:

Posted (edited)

With that amount of gutation, I thought of I. dryadus (she says with a complete lack of conviction).

 

What's the host?

Edited by janey
Posted
With that amount of gutation, I thought of I. dryadus. What's the host?

 

NO Janey, not on yer nelly lass:biggrin:

 

It is a Beech specialist, confined to old growth woodlands, and it may turn out to be either I. nodulosus or some wierd anamorph of pfiefferi, waiting for the guvnor to show up!:thumbup:

Posted
NO Janey, not on yer nelly lass:biggrin:

 

I only made the suggestion coz I love the public humiliation...

 

 

:lol:

Posted
am I that cruel?

 

 

Not at all. You will have to try much, much harder if you want to upset me :biggrin:

 

It's worth it for the amount that I eventually learn from you.

Posted
heres another that is a mystery to me:001_huh:

[ATTACH]63212[/ATTACH]

 

I think it's a type of regeneration with a new layer with pores of Inonotus cuticularis or I. nodulosus on top of old annual fruitbodies from last year, which have not (yet) lost contact with the mycelium. The only Polypore otherwise associated with old fruitbodies of Inonotus is Antrodiella hoehnelii.

Gerrit

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