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Sunday, 23 October 2016

Can you spot the fungus?


These are Bracket Fungi even though they looked like mushrooms when starting out, almost indistinguishable from the rocks, but they are rock hard and sturdy, like most Brackets.

Like all fungi, bracket fungus likes a damp environment and tree bracket fungi attack the hardwood interior, and therefore, the structural integrity of the tree and are the cause of white or brown rot. 
 

Luckily these appeared in a damp spot next to my garden path amongst some rocks and were not near any of my trees. Make sure the bases of trees don’t stand in water. As soon as the infection is noted, removal of the bracket fungus shelves will at least prevent the spore release that may infect other trees. The good news is that these fungi attack the old and the weak and often occur after a tree is damaged by man or nature and play an integral part in the decomposition of wood.

Standard English Name(s): bracket fungus, shelf fungus, tree fungus, conk

Scientific Name(s): various species of Fomes, Fomitopsis, Ganoderma, etc.
 
 

2 comments:

  1. They are well disguised among the large pebbles and rocks. Most of the bracket fungi I see start growing on tree stumps several years after the trees were cut down.

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    1. Me too John, so I was a bit stumped to identify these, and because of their feel and hardness, the only conclusion I could come to was that they are bracket fungi. They never were "soft" like mushrooms, hard right from the beginning.

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