Monday, November 1, 2010

Headach. When To Have Mri

Ceriporiopsis pannocincta - Blassgrüner Knorpelporling

No. 83 - The Rhine-Main-Fund
Very rare species, in Germany so far only in red beech. This waxy-cartilaginous, only resupinat growing Porling, with its tiny, 6 - 8 per mm measured pores is on average about 20 - 30 cm in size, but also on the suitable substrate is very extensive and up to 1 m or more barkringed strains in the optimum phase pull. The fruiting bodies are about 1 - 4 mm thick, whitish, but particularly in the pore region have partially or entirely a striking, pale green color. Because of the almost invisible pores, keep to it so easy for a Corticiaceae. The FK can uniformly smooth, easy step-console-shaped, but also pustules irregularly, eg waxy-cartilaginous adhesions be marked near the white fibrous edges. Sterile parts are occasionally punctuated brown stains or discolored so under pressure. Occasionally seen at the pore and small, amber-brown Guttationströpfchen. is
between the tubes and the Trama, a gelatinous, sometimes slightly darker layer of gelatinized, thin, thick under 4μ hyphae. The microscope is first and unique feature of the species are narrow, with 1μ wide, sausage-shaped, reminiscent of bacterial spores, which you can only find at Skeletocutis nivea.
typical for C. pannocincta is the strong, to young F. pinicola fruit body reminiscent odor. With practice, the species can therefore be determined from the hand. It is - like all species of the genus - monomitisch, has buckles and causes a white rot in wood.
The first record for Germany was probably I. Nuss in 1974. From the former East Germany then isolated finds from 1977 are known (fungal flora of the GDR from 1987). In the Rhine-Main area, we met the way it several times since 1983 in the NSGs at Mörfelden. Lack of appropriate literature at that time she was determined not to us what was only after further strikes in 1986 and appropriate investigation (det. Jahn & Grosse-Brauckmann). A more detailed description with drawings Micro can be found in the Festschrift for the 25th Anniversary of the Black Forest Mushroom training show of 1987.
The ecological requirements of C. pannocincta can be described as spectacular. There are both wet and dry, warm beech forests on nutrient-poor rather, some sandy but moist, boggy soil. It grows in damaged, standing beech trees as well as to lying trunks or root residues.
The illustrated findings were photographed in the fall of 2010 in the Frankfurt city forest on a beech trunk piece.

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