Barney Wood
Bleeding Broadleaf Crust (Stereum rugosum)
A very large Common Bonnet (Mycena galericulata)?
Delightful small club fungus that favours bracken..
Bracken Club (Typhula quiquiliaris)
First described in 1803 by James Sowerby.
Burgundy Drop Bonnet (Mycena haemotopus)
Contorted Pipe Club (Macrotyphula fistulosa var contorta)
Cortinarius Sp?
From
Jeremy
Cortanarius hirtus
Rusty Pore Crust (Phellinus ferruginosus)
1?
Cheiloystidia on the gill edge ornamented with horns. Cervus = deer - antler like horns
Deer Shield (Pluteus cervinus)
from
First Nature
2?
3?
4?
Harvestmen Sp?
Oligolophus tridens?
Hymenoscyphus calyculus
Leafy Brain (Tremella foliacea)
White Laced Shank (Megacollybia platyphylla)
Nut Disco (Hymneoscyphus fructigenus)
5?
From
Anne
Large Fungus Appreciation Society
Plums & Custard (Tricholomopsis rutilans)
6?
Spindle Sp
from
Steve
Yellow Club (Clavulinopsis helvola)
Young growth of Ochre Spreading Tooth (Steccherrinum ochraceum)
A wood rotting crust fungus of deciduous hard woods.
Tawny Funnel (Lepista flaccida)
From
Tony L
The second was what I decided was Mucronella calva after much consideration. I could not decide whether it was a clustered clavarioid or a toothy resupinate. I tried to make it into Kavinia alboviridis (FTE1 p.1041) which is very rare. Although it had what appeared to be a 'cotton wool subiculum', it gave no colour with FeSO4 and had smaller spores so it wasn't. I have two reservations with M. calva - height was up to 2mm but FTE states up to 1.5mm, and the very few spores I could find (it was deteriorating quickly even on Saturday evening) appeared to be non-amyloid although otherwise consistent. Did anyone else take a piece? M. calva would be the 4th Norfolk record. I dried what remained.
Further to this Tony then added
Looking at your image of Mucronella calva I am increasingly doubtful of my identification -
it really should not have branched or bifurcate 'teeth'. If the team wanted you could try to get a sequence. I will write it up as aDNA proposal.
Asteroma padi A micro fungus found on Bird Cherry (Prunus padus)
Curious how in these instances the growth form of the fungus is reminiscent of the branching structure of a tree.
Notice also the dulling effect on the surrounding tissue compared with the glossy greenness of unaffected tissue.
Ugly Milkcap (Lacarius turpis)
9?
Powderpuff Bracket (Postia ptychogaster)
Purplepore Bracket (Trichaptum abietinum)
Common Puffball (Lycoperdon periatum)
Marssonina betulina
Collybia cookei
From
Tony L
I did spend time on Saturday evening with two fungi. First, the stout reddening agaric found by Sean. Everything pointed to Leugoagaricus badhamii except:
- Very large stature. The cap had not expanded but FN gives stipe diameter as 3-6 (-10)mm - ours was 15mm.
- Marginate base to stipe.
- Bruised orange (not red) when fresh although that evening it only did so at the apex (reddening elsewhere). Any bruising quickly went black (as L. badhamii).
- Cap went grey with KOH (3%), not green (although possibly greenish-grey). FN states it should go green.
Hairy Nuts Disco (Lanzia echinophila) growing on Sweetchestnut (Castanea sativa) husks.