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.
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