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Posted
I could get right into house rot looking at pics like that pete!:thumbup1:

 

very very cool shots

 

Hama, well its a bonus to find something pretty every now and again! :001_cool: But I'm not sure it entirely repays the utter toil of crawling around the roof voids and subfloors of filthy buildings :laugh1: Much rather be in the woods or up a tree any day..

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Posted (edited)
1. How is the difference significant?

2. hyphal water transport. However, I’m not convinced that the 'foraging' tendency observed in S. lacrymans is unique to it. I think it is a common habit amongst 'necrotrophic' fungi

 

Pete,

1. Only significant for a mycologist, who wants to identify and document a species with 100 % certainty :biggrin: .

2. I think, it's restricted to saprotrophic (dry) brown rot causing species degrading (processed) wood inside buildings, that have to decompose wood under relatively dry circumstances.

Edited by Fungus
Posted
Spotted this very wee little critter. On further digging around to see if the stem went into the ground i noticed that it was attached to a burdock stem cut last year.

 

Matt,

Psathyrella species, could be P. prona s.l.

Posted
Pete,

1. Only significant for a mycologist, who wants to identify and document a species with 100 % certainty :biggrin: .

2. I think, it's restricted to saprotrophic (dry) brown rot causing species degrading (processed) wood inside buildings, that have to decompose wood under relatively dry circumstances.

 

Gerrit

1. Understood, thank you ...:thumbup1:

2. In woodland/ forest environments surely you find evidence of similar habits amongst saprotrophic fungi?

Posted
In woodland/ forest environments surely you find evidence of similar habits amongst saprotrophic fungi?

 

Apart from Serpula lacrymans, which is not a "field" species, I suppose it could f.i. be expected from some dry brown rot causing species, such as Laetiporus sulphureus, when the mycelium (mycelial felts) is only present in the heartwood of f.i. Quercus robur without being connected to moisture holding living tissue through the radial rays.

Posted

Havent had a chance to book browse, so any ideas? On dead oak in army owned woodland, happened to be coronet cut over a path. First coroneting Ive seen my way :thumbup:

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