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Posted

Birch with Fomes fomenatrius and Piptoporus betulinus on the same branch.

 

A more common occurrence in the north of the UK but less common to see both species on the same tree host here in the south east.

 

IMG_6545.thumb.JPG.54d854d29929579b695ec2d9b1abeb10.JPG

 

The Fomes decay is a simultaneous white rot and the Piptoporus decay is a brown rot, both are clearly evident here in seperate branch sections found on the floor.

 

IMG_6547.thumb.JPG.a61a2ac1a77c98616fb551faf61f6d9f.JPG

 

The tip of the branch is where the majority of the Piptoporus colonisation and fruiting is located and the base of the branch is mostly colonised by the Fomes.

IMG_6550.thumb.JPG.24bf350a8aa19c700f7f283578ea7da0.JPG

IMG_6565.thumb.JPG.d166e4dd222e02293aee06967abc7653.JPG

IMG_6566.thumb.JPG.1d41efe3acb5681669dfa6aaeee672c2.JPG

 

Sliced and diced to have a closer look at the over lapping decay colonisations along the branch.

 

IMG_6572.thumb.JPG.9e636523e7201bb6e05fc3f868d88f09.JPG

IMG_6582.thumb.JPG.947c5f1dec85240c3cd9a91f0a05f129.JPG

IMG_6576.thumb.JPG.8a005a245eaccd437adb09686b0c34c3.JPG

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IMG_6579.thumb.JPG.c837c13edc6fb1bf7ac1e3756c063f0b.JPG

 

Francis Schwarze (Fungal strategies of Wood Decay in Trees) mentions that a common occurance in advanced colonisation of Fomes decay are cracks filled with white/yellow mycelial skins, which can be clearly seen in these last cross sections taken close to the branch union just below the fruiting body.

 

IMG_6587.thumb.JPG.36e2a5b8272f2d86578f9577575c28f5.JPG

IMG_6588.thumb.JPG.68eff1a7bd1c36584ab54195e78de782.JPG

 

 

  • Like 2
  • 3 months later...

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Posted (edited)
On 18/10/2017 at 21:32, David Humphries said:

Francis Schwarze (Fungal strategies of Wood Decay in Trees) mentions that a common occurance in advanced colonisation of Fomes decay are cracks filled with white/yellow mycelial skins, which can be clearly seen in these last cross sections taken close to the branch union just below the fruiting body.

That's interesting David, I took this photo late last year - an alder with what I thought were developing Ganoderma FBs.

 

Maybe I misidentified it. I'll try to find a photo of the FB

20171220_093354100_iOS.jpg

20171220_092922379_iOS.jpg

Edited by Gary Prentice
added 2nd photo
  • Like 1
Posted
3 hours ago, David Humphries said:

Heterobasidion annosum & Kretzschmaria deusta vying for the same rooty wood volume here on this beech from earlier today.

 

Not much rooty stuff left I suspect :D

 

IMG_2149.thumb.JPG.7c318e05ae2c603187632d9e691c6dce.JPG

 

IMG_2126.thumb.JPG.ef97e2fc55d26a3b1a589f0d0db5bdf0.JPG

 

IMG_2134.thumb.JPG.ea91213191fdc5c70b4bc2a49e4ad32b.JPG

 

IMG_2127.thumb.JPG.c295400545bf7bcb5360106b85e68494.JPG

 

Did you look around the back of the tree for Meripulus?

Posted
2 minutes ago, Jake Andrews said:

Did you look around the back of the tree for Meripulus?

As well as the Hetero and Kretz this one also has colonisations of Ganoderma australe, Herricium chirahtus, Flammulina velutipes, Fomes fomentarius and Meripilus Jake.

  • Haha 2
Posted
1 minute ago, David Humphries said:

As well as the Hetero and Kretz this one also has colonisations of Ganoderma australe, Herricium chirahtus, Flammulina velutipes, Fomes fomentarius and Meripilus Jake.

That was supposed to be a joke:o Sounds like a pretty doomed tree! whats the plan?

Posted
3 minutes ago, Jake Andrews said:

That was supposed to be a joke:o Sounds like a pretty doomed tree! whats the plan?

It's already an 8m monolith Jake, we'll reduce it some more when I feel it's completely defying gravity 

  • Like 2
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted
On 10/18/2017 at 21:32, David Humphries said:

Birch with Fomes fomenatrius and Piptoporus betulinus on the same branch.

 

A more common occurrence in the north of the UK but less common to see both species on the same tree host here in the south east.

 

IMG_6545.thumb.JPG.54d854d29929579b695ec2d9b1abeb10.JPG

 

The Fomes decay is a simultaneous white rot and the Piptoporus decay is a brown rot, both are clearly evident here in seperate branch sections found on the floor.

 

IMG_6547.thumb.JPG.a61a2ac1a77c98616fb551faf61f6d9f.JPG

 

The tip of the branch is where the majority of the Piptoporus colonisation and fruiting is located and the base of the branch is mostly colonised by the Fomes.

IMG_6550.thumb.JPG.24bf350a8aa19c700f7f283578ea7da0.JPG

IMG_6565.thumb.JPG.d166e4dd222e02293aee06967abc7653.JPG

IMG_6566.thumb.JPG.1d41efe3acb5681669dfa6aaeee672c2.JPG

 

Sliced and diced to have a closer look at the over lapping decay colonisations along the branch.

 

IMG_6572.thumb.JPG.9e636523e7201bb6e05fc3f868d88f09.JPG

IMG_6582.thumb.JPG.947c5f1dec85240c3cd9a91f0a05f129.JPG

IMG_6576.thumb.JPG.8a005a245eaccd437adb09686b0c34c3.JPG

IMG_6577.thumb.JPG.44e85a5f09aea29a762531e4513546f2.JPG

IMG_6579.thumb.JPG.c837c13edc6fb1bf7ac1e3756c063f0b.JPG

 

Francis Schwarze (Fungal strategies of Wood Decay in Trees) mentions that a common occurance in advanced colonisation of Fomes decay are cracks filled with white/yellow mycelial skins, which can be clearly seen in these last cross sections taken close to the branch union just below the fruiting body.

 

IMG_6587.thumb.JPG.36e2a5b8272f2d86578f9577575c28f5.JPG

IMG_6588.thumb.JPG.68eff1a7bd1c36584ab54195e78de782.JPG

 

 

Working over at Burnham Beeches currently and we came across this dual decay on birch again today, this time with the added colonisation of Daedaleopsis confragosa thrown in for good measure.

 

IMG_3693.thumb.JPG.35fc668328c379a07e9dffef9c553b7b.JPG

 

IMG_3688.thumb.JPG.18b12162798727a3b3eea12d1ef30d6e.JPG

 

IMG_3699.thumb.JPG.961b619ed06a8b75d6a004c30f010e79.JPG

 

 

 

  • Like 1
  • 1 year later...
Posted

Again at Burnham Beeches....

Brown rot and white rot at two ends of the same short beech wood volume. Fomitopsis pinicola (red banded polypore) and Pannellus stiptica - (bitter oysterling)

 

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3E931F90-8547-4B62-B16F-6620B0C50C85.thumb.png.a1028b9f9bcaa369234bc0830c2d41de.png

 

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