Figure 1: Porous underside of fungi.
Figure 2: Topside of fungi showing color getting lighter moving from proximal to distal.
-
-- Name: Merulius tremellosus
-
Common
name: Dry Rot Fungus
-
Family: Meruliaceae
-
Collection
Date: September 22, 2016
-
Habitat: dead
tree log
-
Location:
South Chagrin Nature Reserve
-
Description:
light brown color, striped, gets lighter color as it goes outwards
-
Keying
Guide: Mushrooms Demystified by David Arora
-
Intro Key
p. 52-55 Fruiting body shelflike…. Polypores
& Bracket Fungi, p 549; 1B Not as above; spore-bearing surface not
composed of tubes, or if composed of tubes then the tubes forming a united
layer; fruiting body fleshy, tough, woody, etc…2; 2B Fruiting body knoblike,
hooflike, bracketike, shelflike, or crustlike; stalk absent, rudimentary, or
attached to side or top of cap; growing on wood or roots……4; 4B Pore surface
exposed; not growing on birch, or if on birch
then margin not curblike….5; 5B Not as above; pore surface differently
colored and/or not separable and elastic-gelatinous…..6; 6B Fruiting body
normally with a cap(upper sterile surface), but sometimes resupinate,
especially if growing on the undersides of logs….7; 7A Spore bearing surface
composed of shallow veins which may form very broad “pores” or pits….(see Stereaceae & Allies, p 604); 1B Not
as above….2; 2B Not as above….4; 4B Not as above….5; 5B Not as above….7; 7B Spore-bearing
surface conspicuously warty, lumpy, furrowed, ridged, wrinkled, pitted, or
honeycombed with large “pores”….13; 13B Growing in the wild(on logs, stumps,
etc.)….15; 15B Not as above; spore-bearing surface usually with a honeycomb or
veined appearance; cap or free margin sometimes present….16; 16A Cap or free
margin hairy, white….Merulius tremellosus(see Serula lacrymans, p 610)


IT would be nice to see the stalk attachment to the cap for this one since it can be important.
ReplyDelete