Friday, January 29, 2010

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Inonotus nodulosus - Knotiger Schillerporling


No. 75
A find from the Rhine-Main area.
Widespread but not common kind, and almost only to Buchholz. The nodular growth Schillerporling resupinat to effuse-reflex on the side or bottom dead or dying, but always full of beech logs with bark in the optimum stage of wood decomposition. The cap can then coalesce into larger areas and groups.
The type is a weak parasite that causes white rot in wood is quite active.
The little thick, almost triangular hat, which is a shaggy-tomentose surface, and young "dazzling pores" have are tough and strong. At the age they are becoming unsightly and die in winter from then (Schillerporlinge are annual). Keeps you young, growing FK to the bottom diagonally into the light, one can perceive the beautiful iridescence of the pore surface, which gave the genus its name.
The pore openings are slit conspicuous (see photos.).
can confuse the knotty Schiller Porling other species of the genus Inonotus, especially with I. radiatus, the "Erlenschillerporling. This is has larger, more protruding cap and has a significant powerful young orange to yellow to brown Hutfilzfarben going. It is found preferably in humid forest areas in marshes, streams, etc., and to almost only on alder. However, there are
in both species between the substrates, although very rare, overlapping, ie I. nodulosus can sometimes also occur Erle I. radiatus and vice versa to book. A correct determination likely to succeed in most cases.
The genus Inonotus (Schillerporlinge) belongs to the family Hymenochaetaceae. These are resupinate, effuse-reflexed to pileate Porling Trama with brown and brown tubes.
you have to tighten loose, usually brownish hyphae and ovoid-to elliptical, thick-walled spores. Are typical of many species, the dark brown setae (thick-walled, pointed cells in the hymenium), which in doubtful findings may be species identification. I. radiatus has, for example curved, I. nodulosus however, just shaped setae.
The Trama stained with potassium hydroxide (KOH) - as with all Hymenochaetaceae - strong black.
A beautiful, comprehensive study of the nature and doubles can be found in the Westphalian fungal letters of 1977.
The images were presented in winter 2010 in the Frankfurt city forest on a lie, beech root and show photographs of fruiting bodies in a more advanced age.

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Phleogena faginea - Buchen-Hütchenträger

No. 73 - A find from the Rhine-Main area . Very rare species
This, to my knowledge previously unknown in South Hesse Pilzchen - German Krieglsteiner are in the "Distribution maps of Great mushrooms for all Germany in 1990 only 11 references to squares - is already a special phenomenon. The only 1 - 3 mm, spherical fruiting bodies resembling tiny, stalked earthballs (eg Tulostoma) but have basidia which are divided transversely, and are therefore (for the first time) to the "Auriculariaceae. They are thus akin to the wood ears or ear lobes zoned fungus.
the early 19th Century was the way in Europe and was known as Onygena decorticata pers. Schweinitz described, a genre that now contains animal hooves and horns occurring ascomycetes (fungi Horn), whose fruiting bodies appear outwardly similar.
P. faginea likes to grow on standing beech trunks, as well as other hardwoods, and there is a predominance of tree crevices covered with hundreds of small fruiting bodies. Speaking of the existence of this type knows nothing about you can see them easily, or keep it for a slime mold (Myxomycetes).
The small thin stalks are only 2-3 mm long. The spherical part at maturity is densely filled with spores, which hold the surface. This is pale ocher-colored to light brown, kleiig-tomentose and dissolves later. The Shroom have crushed at maturity an abnormal smell of Maggi. A detailed, vivid description of the fungus are found in the Westphalian fungal letters by Hermann Jahn, which will be published for several years on the Internet: www.pilzbriefe.de / species / faginea_Phleogena.html
The Book-hat-makers probably is a kind of winter semester respectively. He was at the same time in 2009 in the Rhine-Main area detected by K. Hoffmann (Taunus) and H. Lotz (southern Mönchbruch). From the latter site are the presented images.

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Auriporia aurulenta - Duftender Goldporling

No. 74
A find from the Rhine-Main region
Very rare species, almost exclusively on coniferous wood.
The "Scented Goldporling" is - if the great Lucky to find him even once - in its fresh state in the strong bright yellow, rich carrot to orange-red color. Increase young bodies may also adopt a pink tone. The one-year Braunfäuleerreger is extended, mostly 10 - 20 cm, but up to 50 cm long, resupinate fruiting bodies on the side or underside of dead coniferous wood. The relatively large pore diameter 2 - 3 per mm. The FK are soft and can be up to 3 cm thick. The edges are frayed a bit sterile and often fibrous.
smell when fresh fruit bodies such as the apricot compote, from the closed box at home I could be a sweet Odor with a hint of vanilla exercise.
The documented for the BRD first record dates back to 1982, and indeed from the Wimbach Gorge in Baden-Wuerttemberg. He was also mycologists as Jahn at the time failed as determined salmonicolor Hapalopilus and was thus reflected in the article "A non-discoloring in KOH" Poria "salmonicolor" in the ZfM of 1983 (with picture). Dr. Maser and Dr. Jean Keller of the University of Neuchatel, it is thanks to them to have sustainability in the Fund ultimately detected by David et al in 1974 described Auriporia aurulenta.
The species is considered to submontane to alpine and was in Germany so far, except in Baden-Württemberg only found in the Bavarian forest (according to L. Krieglsteiner). Further finds it in Yugoslavia, Austria, Switzerland, France and Czech Republic.
confusion is possible with H. salmonicolor, which deals with KOH immediately turned purple, with Pycnoporellus fulgens - No. 58 (but usually with a clear, shaggy-felted Hutoberfläche) Furthermore, with Ceriporia purpurea (but buckleless septa) or Oligoporus placenta (. more flesh-to pink).
microscopy is the kind of small, short-elliptical, colorless, non-amyloid spores, monomitisches Hyphensystem with buckles and thick-walled, partially encrusted Lamprozystiden set. The presented Fund (Fund presumably for Hessen) I am indebted to Mrs. D. Krell, which led me in late October 2009 at the Taunus Wiesbaden Brüls the mountain where I could photograph the way to a pine stump.