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Posted

The fungi scratched relatively easy and the outer part was movable. The rest was rock hard. Looking at the stump, I think it may have been overkill to fell it.

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Posted
A nice one from a few months back now. Polyporus squamosus on Ash with extent of colonisation a7c53348b513eaa89a34921312bc8e06.jpg844c569c1e6bd593086d6eb3efefe559.jpgfb95d24dfb4f7fce5832fd5daedd884e.jpg

 

 

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Hey mate, not overly up on my fungi but i removed a big old sycamore with the exact same decay inside today. There was no fruiting body i could see but is this typical of polyporus squamosus? Thanksd6e03f70f1d8a2e0f78bd3517421549d.jpg

 

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Posted

Saw this today, mixed native woodland and this was offset from the base of a semi mature Ash. The resistance to frost disintegration is impressive, it was so cold I nearly fell apart.

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Posted (edited)
Saw this today, mixed native woodland and this was offset from the base of a semi mature Ash. The resistance to frost disintegration is impressive, it was so cold I nearly fell apart.

 

 

Nice set of Sarcoscypha coccinea Julian, unless ofcourse microscopy shows them to be one of the other Sarcoscypha species?

 

 

 

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Edited by David Humphries
Posted
Nice set of Sarcoscypha coccinea Julian, unless ofcourse microscopy shows them to be one of the other Sarcoscypha species?

 

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Thanks, I'll settle for the Genus. Microscopy wasn't on my mind when seeing off hypothermia was.

Posted

Mensularia nodulosa (confirmed - syn. Inonotus nodulosus) on beech, New Forest. Delighted with this one! Also plenty of other fungi on this tree (you can see Hohenbuehelia atrocoerulea in the background and Chondrostereum purpureum, too).

 

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Posted

A weak pathogen, perhaps - this beech was still alive (just). From the ex-Inonotus bunch (and remaining ones in that genus), Xanthoporia radiata is likely to be the least pathogenic upon trees, instead leaning towards the saprotrophic end of the continuum.

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