Showing posts with label Fungus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fungus. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 December 2019

A wonderful Autumn for fungi

This wet autumn has seen a bumper crop of fungi, with many appearing in places where I had never seen them before. When I say fungi, I really mean the fruiting bodies. They grow from the mycellium, which is a network of fungal threads from which the fruiting bodies grows, is present all year round.

BEWARE: The following have not been formally verified yet.

This year, it started to rain in September and seemed to keep going through October and November. Flushes of fungi soon followed.

Earth ball, Manor Park, 10 Aug 2019
The first to appear include the Boletales such as Earthballs (Scleroderma citrinum).

Sulphur Tuft, West Park Nature Reserve, 05 Oct 2019
These are followed by "toadstool" shaped fungi. On one of the Uckfield Nature Reserve Supporters walks, we saw several different types such as the Sulphur Tufts (Hypholoma fasciculare) shown above.

Magpie Inkcap, West Park, 06 Oct 2019
We also found inkcaps such as the Magpie Inkcap (Coprinopsis picacea).

Fly Agaric, Manor Park, 13 Oct 2019
Closer to home, near a birch, I was amazed to see Fly Agarics (Amanita muscaria). I had never seen them in that particular place before.

Parasol, Buxted Park, 26 Oct 2019
Towards the end of the month, a Parkrun took me into grassy habitats where I saw large Parasols (Macrolepiota procera) including the three above.

Club, Manor Park, 06 Nov 2019
The weather had been too wet for our gardener to mow the lawn and some fungi such as this Apricot Club (Clavulinopsis luteoalba) had time to grow.

Oysterling, West Park, 24 Nov 2019
As the colder weather rolled in and the fallen leaves began to rot down, the bigger "toadstools" mostly disappeared but, during a Uckfield Nature Reserves Supporters walk, we noticed that a variety of small fungi and large brackets were taking their place. We found the tiny Oysterling (Crepidotus epibryus) above on a leaf.

Common Birds Nest, West Park, 24 Nov 2019
We also found my first ever Common Birds Nest fungi (Crucibulum laeve). The spores are contained in the tiny eggs, which are splashed out of the nest by raindrops.

Clouded Funnel, West Park, 24 Nov 2019
One of the few bigger fungi still present was the frost resistant Clouded Funnel (Clitocybe nebularis).

Southern Bracket, Buxted Park, 09 Nov 2019
Brackets such as the Southern Bracket (Ganoderma australe) also persist in the increasingly cold weather.

Crystal Brain Fungus, Manor Park, 01 Dec 2019
The recent winds have blown quite a few branches down. When I picked this one up, I got a rather unpleasant surprise as I found myself clutching something very squishy!  It is Crystal Brain Fungus (Exidia nucleata), whose translucent blobs have solid white dots in - much like frogspawn on a stick!

I've put away my books and camera for a while, but I can confidently say that I have never seen such a wonderful variety of fungi.

Thursday, 30 October 2014

Views (Williams) Wood - Autumn Fungi

In my previous post about Views (Williams) wood, I talked about pulling up Balsam to make more room for native wild flowers.  Now we are at the end of October and the last of the flowers including some remnants of balsam are fading. The dense green canopy of summer leaves is gently turning amber and thinning out. As my eyes follow falling leaves to the woodland floor I see new colours and shapes in the rusty carpet.  After recent rain and warmth, large numbers of fungi are appearing. I'm not very sure about identifying fungi so all of the names in the following are my best shot.

The Woodland Trust have cleared some of the rides, to allow light to trigger wild flowers, and left some of the logs to provide natural habitats. Corel spot, a fungus I sometimes see in our garden, dots some of the rotting wood.

Corel spot on rotting logs.
Not far from where I was working in June, a huge mossy stump looks like a fairy's garden. It is smothered with feather moss and dotted tiny tree-like ferns. Glistening Incap fungi complete this magical picture. 

Glossy inkcap in feather moss
Crossing the river takes us into Buxted Park. Here we find a scattering of Chanterelles and a pretty pink-coloured Bonnet fungus.

Bonnet fungus
In the drier areas there are big parasol mushroons, 6 to 8 inches across. Making our way back between the lakes, we pass an ancient stump. It provides a home to brightly-coloured small staghorn fungi and turkey tail bracket fungi, which jut out from the old wood.

Small Staghorn
As we wind back through the woods, a sudden burst of sunshine turns brown leaves gold. As they fall, the leaves drift around clumps of moss almost smothered by sulphur tufts.

Sulphur Tuft

The wood saved the best until last. Hidden just a few yards from the gate, an old stump is an open jewel box lit up by sparkly fairy inkcaps and clumps of golden fungi.

An unknown yellow fungus and fairy bonnets.
Then home with a cup of tea, a pile of books and the First Nature web site to identify our woodland treasures.