The Ultimate "What is this Fungi?" thread.

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Anyone know what fungi this is? It was found next to a slate track,near oak and hazel trees, most of the surrounding forest was coniferous.

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Ste
 

awarner

Nomad
Apr 14, 2012
487
4
Southampton, Hampshire
Looking like Chicken of the wood on an oak but seems late in the year plus it's more brown than the usual yellow but could that be the age of it?
Main reason for confirmation is this is an oak that is currently under threat from the tides and erosion from the Hamble so need to know how this may affect the stability of the tree before it decides to block the river if it fell, which another close by did last August.
It's quite high up the tree so not able to reach it without a ladder.

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Geoff Dann

Native
Sep 15, 2010
1,252
31
55
Sussex
www.geoffdann.co.uk
Looking like Chicken of the wood on an oak but seems late in the year plus it's more brown than the usual yellow but could that be the age of it?

Yes and yes.

Main reason for confirmation is this is an oak that is currently under threat from the tides and erosion from the Hamble so need to know how this may affect the stability of the tree before it decides to block the river if it fell, which another close by did last August.

I can't help you with that. COTW, like many saprophytic fungi, feed on the heartwood of trees i.e. wood that is already dead, even though the tree itself is alive. As a result, the tree ends up increasingly hollow. Some trees, including oaks, can stay standing when they are hundreds of years old and hollow enough for a person to walk inside them. Others fall over long before the heartwood is gone, for various reasons.
 

awarner

Nomad
Apr 14, 2012
487
4
Southampton, Hampshire
Thanks for the confirmation, I did wonder how long it may survive as I have an very old ash that is hollow after a lightning strike and it's still going strong with only a few inches of wood still being intact.
Another tree to report to the National Trust to have on the watch list.
 

dennydrewcook

Forager
Nov 26, 2014
245
0
25
maidstone
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Edge of a birch woods connecting to chestnut woods, stains blue when cut, defo doesn't look tasty 😂
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Found in a chestnut woods under an oak, some sort of Russula but no clue what?
 

Machiavelli

Full Member
May 21, 2009
127
65
Good Ole' Lancashire
I think I found a few patches of The Deceiver (Laccaria laccata) today. It's often found with beech and Silver Birch and is edible, despite its slightly neon pink colour.




 
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