Identification: Crust-like Polypore

Discussion in 'Fungi, Lichens and Slime Molds' started by mikephillips, Sep 27, 2013.

  1. mikephillips

    mikephillips Member

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    These guys are not exactly a crust but have spread over a decent portion of a small stump. Sort of little cups but with polypore building blocks.

    The "large" cup at the top (center-left) is about 1 cm across, and progresses in colour over the course of the three pics (19 days), as do many of the individual cups.
     

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  2. Frog

    Frog Generous Contributor Forums Moderator 10 Years

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    I like the shapes and the yellowish tinge is interesting: Did the stump looked like a conifer or a hardwood? Were they growing more from a particular part of the stump ie sides, base or cut face top of stump?

    -frog
     
  3. mikephillips

    mikephillips Member

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    The cup-crusts are growing on two sides of the stump (roughly S and E) nearer the base and not the top. I'm not good with identifying old black stumps but the trees around (on a bit of an upland) are mostly pine and doug-fir, with a bit of alder, so most likely conifer. I'll look at it next time I'm back, maybe get a clue.
     
  4. mikephillips

    mikephillips Member

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    I revisited the place and the trees around are just shorepine/lodgepole and doug-fir, no alder after all, so almost certainly a conifer. Best guess would be fir but not certain, if it matters. And the colours are still evolving, with some parts, like the upper center-left ghoul face, which started off with a red streak, turning to yellow, and now moving back toward red again.
     
  5. mikephillips

    mikephillips Member

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    I've found another log these guys are growing on more recently. The old previous ones have not grown at all in this time, the biggest ones being only 1 cm or so across. The new one is much bigger, ~ 7 cm x 2 cm, and definitively growing on a pine log, appearing mainly in the furrows of the decaying bark.
     

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  6. Frog

    Frog Generous Contributor Forums Moderator 10 Years

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    hmmm......
    Are they leathery, or very flexible/weak?

    thanks,
    frog
     
  7. mikephillips

    mikephillips Member

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    Heh, I'm back. They're fairly tough and leathery. And very persistent. They have survived the cold snap of a couple weeks ago and seem healthy and still colourful. New pic attached from the group on the second log. The first lot from the stump are fading a bit but not these guys.

    Thanks, Mike
     

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  8. Frog

    Frog Generous Contributor Forums Moderator 10 Years

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    Hi Mike,
    I can't remember if I've asked you this before: Are you in the Victoria area? If so, could you bring a specimen sample to the SVIMS meeting on March 6?
    frog
     

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