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Tony Croft aka hamadryad

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Everything posted by Tony Croft aka hamadryad

  1. that first image is a stonker Mr Humphries,
  2. for petes sake it inonotus dryadeus:001_rolleyes:
  3. There has been a post driven in over if not into roots, and severe soil level changes. the staining may be from past activity (bacterial wetwood) more likey on cerris than robur but not exclusive by any means.
  4. is it Quercus cerris
  5. nice update ben, good to see you observing and learning from nature this way and adding it for all to share.
  6. well done Steve, an accolade for sure. I wouldnt have been able to reach so many arbs if not for arbtalk, priceless.
  7. David, when you say micorrhizal are you saying youve located nodes? or fruiting bodies? was I mistaken in thinking Pear is endo or maybe ectendro (undetermined ) what cropped up out of interest:001_smile:
  8. u missed the gano above your head unless my eyes decieve me!
  9. time you started reading some fungi threads!
  10. as matt said Phaeolus, the smell is terpinoids
  11. David Moore's World of Fungi: where mycology starts
  12. </title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/index.php/tools/css/themes/britishmycologicalsociety/main.css" /> <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /> <title>The British Mycological Society :: Red Data List H corraloides and erinaceus red data
  13. not essential, this proven by the appalling state of work being carried out globally!
  14. and your sig line from Cassian, I would say ALL we are told should be questioned at all times, not just in arboriculture:biggrin:
  15. Correct spelling cirrhatus i think but not Bap nor Red data
  16. O.K Sloth And Warren, see you at 9 at Hatfield, give us a ring if you cant see me 07703464771. Im out tonight so wont be online. Its going to be a good hunt guys, wipe your SD cards, and charge your batteries, were gonna need em! Epping is alive, and the russulas are out in force so Hatfield should be rocking too
  17. good judgment, Ganos at low unions never last too long, time for a bit of a restructure:thumbup1:
  18. easy way to tell, look at the underside and see if the gills exude milky substance "Lactate"
  19. oh bless dont spoilit for them! I was going to say nothing:biggrin:
  20. it would be wise, it is clear by the bark changes high in the canopy this was topped about say 30 years ago
  21. Meripilus giganteus AKA the giant polypore. some lovely fibre buckling going on at the base too, selective delignification, thats an old tree
  22. Oh ive a lot of work to do before I can expand on it much, just an educated hunch, Trichodermas thrive on waning fruitbodies like this annual, massive genus and imortant component of the forest ecology. Welcome to Trichoderma taxonomy! Trichoderma virens, a Plant Beneficial Fungus, Enhances Biomass Production and Promotes Lateral Root Growth through an Auxin-Dependent Mechanism in Arabidopsis http://www.weizmann.ac.il/Biological_Chemistry/scientist/Chet/NR.pdf
  23. that be a trichoderma me old mucka
  24. nice one david, is there potential for a ten digit grid for it?

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