Mushrooms occurring in Europe - Funalia trogii


351665157-63eab391c4c99651d9979cf6c61b1f632e33fb5ba7e06e1a0397c6eaef568649.jpeg

Funalia trogii - One-year-old fungus, widely attached to the ground. Consolidated, somewhat elongated or spread out - deflected. The individual sporocarps grow one by one or roof-shaped hats one above the other. Widths 10-120 mm and up to 60 mm, (3) 10-30 mm thick.

Hat in the shape of a semi-circular or oblong shape. Colors ocher, gray, brown, with a shade of red, cinnamon, or faded to gray, never black. Surface covered with vertically sticking or adhering entangled hairs not arranged radially. Sometimes it is covered with a thick, hairy felt, without zones and stripes or indistinctly zoned, with a rugged and velvet edge. The shore is usually thin and sharp, wavy, less dull.

Tubes usually single-layered, sometimes in 2-3 layers. Lengths 2 to 8 mm. In off-white, ocher color, with white-gray coating on the inside, with quite thick divisions, whole edges, finally serrated.

Irregular, round, angular, fairly large, diameter 0.3 to 1 mm, usually 1 to 3 mm, with a serrated blade. In white, yellowish, ochraceous, in fresh sporocarps, sometimes with a lavender shade, after pink compression. Old pale-skin-yellow.

The fleshy, corky pulp is clearly wadded-fibrous when torn, after hard drying. Young whitish, later light brown. Damaged when damaged. In reaction with KOH, it does not turn black, but may slightly dim.

Occurrence: throughout the year; in warm deciduous forests, especially riparian forests, on dead wood of deciduous trees, mainly poplar, willow, beech; usually grows in groups; quite rare.

Value: inedible fungus.

How do you rate this article?

0



Nature - mushrooms
Nature - mushrooms

about fungi occurring on all continents

Send a $0.01 microtip in crypto to the author, and earn yourself as you read!

20% to author / 80% to me.
We pay the tips from our rewards pool.