This fungus produces white
toadstools in clusters, normally high up on the stem. Each time I have found it, it has
been growing on a bark wound or in a branch stub cavity. The bright white flesh attracts
the eye from great distance and draws you towards it (see pictures below).The flesh is
slimy, delicate and translucent in places (you can see the slime on the edge of the cap in
a following picture). Other identification features are its distinctive folded ring and
white spore print.
The fungus is supposedly edible once the slime has been
removed - poached egg fungus! I personally don't find them tempting (unlike fresh
young Chicken
of the Woods). |
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Received email.
I thought you might be interested in
a fact about Oudemansiella mucida, the Porcelain fungus. About 20 years
ago scientists discovered that this fungus ( along with many others as
you know) produced a powerful anti-fungal agent which helps it to defend
its timber from attack by rival species of fungus. This substance was
later synthesised, and spawned ( sorry, no pun intended) a multi-million
pound branch of the agricultural fungicide business, the development of
the strobilurin fungicides. These have been responsible for the most
dramatic improvements in crop yields I have seen in my agricultural
career ( an additional 1 tonne of wheat per hectare is common). Nearly
every single wheat crop in the world is now treated with strobilurin
fungicides, which are now already in their 4th or 5th generation. Not an
arboricultural fact, I know, but it relates to the spalting we see in
timber.
John Clohesy
Brooksby Melton College |