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What izzit? More fungi ident' help needed.


janey
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The first three piccies are of what I think may be Ustlina (no new fangled names here!) on an Ulmus lobellii. I have never - knowingly - come across this in the field before and I have only ever seen it from photos. The black, crumbly mass that I found doesn't really match anything I have seen before, so Ustilina is my best guess. Enlightenment, please? And no, definately ISN'T dog poo :scared1:.

 

And the fourth piccy? Haven't the foggiest :blushing:. It's on a hybrid black poplar and wasn't there last week!

DSC00181.jpg.220e680c5d49068aabc120da94a07fad.jpg

DSC00177.jpg.06d729fd7342060bdb2479edc2203e2a.jpg

DSC00176.jpg.388bbab6812d7b5928de8db0f402b2ae.jpg

DSC00175.jpg.d31bd51fbd1c108707df0395abdfc26c.jpg

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"......black, crumbly mass............"

Sorry, you've lost me. I dont see anything that would go by your description there.....

It certainly doesnt look much like Kretzschmaria deusta to me, either the forms you see ( mature/immature)

The problem as I see, it is nicely illustrated in the last image. Its been a wee bit warm...oh, you noticed? Well, the fruit bodies dont do well in these conditions.....!

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Not great photies Jane, need to get on your knees and get a bit of macro action goin on.

 

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Hands and knees? In a tree pit?? In London??? I think swine 'flu would be the least of my worries if I started doing that :scared1:.

 

No, they are not great pics, but such are the joys of camera 'phones. And some of us don't have proper jobs and don't have time to dawdle :001_tongue:. LoL.

 

I attacked the brackets - for want of a better word - with a combi and they black all the way through and friable. That's still not a lot of help, is it? :sad:

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Hands and knees? In a tree pit?? In London??? I think swine 'flu would be the least of my worries if I started doing that :scared1:.

 

No, they are not great pics, but such are the joys of camera 'phones. And some of us don't have proper jobs and don't have time to dawdle :001_tongue:. LoL.

 

I attacked the brackets - for want of a better word - with a combi and they black all the way through and friable. That's still not a lot of help, is it? :sad:

 

Fair point on the knee issue, at least Ealing streets aren't Hampstead Heath :scared1:

 

 

Even when the mature (black) stage of Ust is quite desicated, you can (when delicate of touch) break it apart, and usually see the spore chambers as in picture 4 of my Ust thread above.

 

 

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I think the the first three may be the remains of a larger 'proper' bracket fungus.

 

Something has also killed off the epicormic growth above the fungus - perhaps a combination of intense sunlight and dry conditions have scorched both of them?

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