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~ a celebration of nature

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Category Archives: fungi

Butter cap anyone?

28 Sunday Oct 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

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Tags

autumn fungi, British fungi, Butter cap, Butter cap mushroom, fungus, Rhodocollybia butyracea

Here’s a fungus I can actually identify! This is the Butter cap, a name that’s so much easier to say than its scientific name Rhodocollybia butyracea.

181028 Butter cap fungus (2)

Thanks to the most excellent First Nature website, I can tell you that Rhodocollybia is from rhodo, meaning ‘pink’ (a reference to the pinkish tinge of the mushroom’s gills), and collybia means ‘small coin’, while the epithet butyracea means ‘buttery’ (but not in taste – it’s a reference to the greasiness of the cap).

181028 Butter cap fungus (1)

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Dead but full of life

22 Monday Oct 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature, trees

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn fungi, bracket fungi, dead tree full of fungi, fungi on tree, gilled fungi, Lycogala sp., slime mould

181022 fungi on log (1)

This tree may be dead but it’s teeming with life.

181022 fungi on log (2)
181022 fungi on log (3)
181022 fungi on log (4)
181022 fungi on log (5)

I’m sure it’s chock full of a huge variety of bugs and beetles, slugs and centipedes, and many other mini-beasties, but what caught my eye was the number of different types of fungi it was supporting.

181022 fungi on log (7)
181022 fungi on log (8)
181022 fungi on log (9)
181022 fungi on log (10)
181022 fungi on log (11)
181022 fungi on log (12)

As well as several species of gilled mushrooms, there were also various intriguing brackets, some oozing golden droplets, and a wonderfully vibrant orange Lycogala species of slime mould. Fungi may often be difficult to identify but they never cease to amaze me.

181022 fungi on log (6)181022 fungi on log (13)

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Image

The cheek of it

12 Friday Oct 2018

Tags

#FungiFriday, fungi, fungus, unidentified fungus

181012 fungi friday

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Posted by sconzani | Filed under autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Just peachy

06 Saturday Oct 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

British fungi, Elm tree, fungi on Elm, fungus, Rhodotus palmatus, Wrinkled peach

I was over the moon when I spotted this first little burst of peachiness growing on an old, ivy-smothered log a week ago.

181006 Wrinkled peach (1)

Why? Because this is one of the few fungi I can positively identify by sight, and it’s quite the rarity in most parts of Britain these days because it grows on Elm, a tree that is itself increasingly rare in Britain nowadays. According to the Forest Research website, 60 million Elm trees have been killed by Dutch Elm disease since it was first discovered in Britain in the 1920s, the majority of those dying since the 1970s.

181006 wrinkled peach (2)181006 wrinkled peach (3)

This fungus is the wonderfully named Wrinkled peach (Rhodotus palmatus). Rhodotus comes from the Ancient Greek Rhodon, meaning rose, and palmatus is Latin and means ‘shaped like a hand’, presumably a reference to the surface texture of the fungus’s cap resembling the lines on the palm of a hand.

181006 Wrinkled peach (4)

Incredibly, I found nine of these fungi on two different logs, and then, on a subsequent visit, found another one growing on a log a few metres away. Presumably the logs are the remains of an Elm that was cut down when Dutch Elm disease was at its height.

181006 wrinkled peach (7)

As you can see from my photos, the fungi range from the very young and fresh to the aging and wrinkled and decaying. Wrinkled peach, when seen at all, is usually found between July and November, so I have a few more weeks yet to enjoy these little beauties.

181006 Wrinkled peach (5)
181006 Wrinkled peach (6)

181006 Wrinkled peach (8)181006 Wrinkled peach (9)

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It’s a brittlestem

25 Tuesday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British fungi, brittlestem fungi, Conical brittlestem, fungus, Parasola conopilus, Psathyrella conopilus

After misidentifying my fungi last week, I’m going to take a huge chance and say that I’m fairly confident these are Conical brittlestems (Parasola conopilus, formerly known as Psathyrella conopilus). I completely understand if you don’t believe me!

180925 Conical brittlestem (2)

180925 Conical brittlestem (3)
180925 Conical brittlestem (1)
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Rosy russulas

21 Friday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#FungiFriday, British fungi, fungus, Red russula, Russula

It’s Fungi Friday and today I have for your pleasure and delight one of the Russula species of fungi. According to the First Nature website of fungi expert Pat O’Reilly, around 160 species of Russula can be found in Britain, and I know from venturing out on past forays with the Glamorgan Fungus Group that the reddish-coloured ones can be especially difficult to identify so I’m not even going to try to put a name to these particular fungi. I just think they’re rather lovely and I hope they brighten your day as much as they did mine.

180921 Russula fungi (5)180921 Russula fungi (6)

180921 Russula fungi (3)
180921 Russula fungi (4)

180921 Russula fungi (1)180921 Russula fungi (2)

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Lawyer’s wig

19 Wednesday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

autumn fungi, confusing fungi, Coprinopsis lagopus, Coprinus comatus, fungus, Hare's-foot inkcap, inkcaps, Lawyer's wig, Shaggy inkcap

I think you can see how this shaggy little fungus got one of its common names, Lawyer’s wig, as it so well resembles the wigs lawyers wear in court. This is Coprinus comatus, also, not surprisingly, known as the Shaggy inkcap. Coprinus means ‘living on dung’ but this fungus really just prefers very rich soil with lots of decaying plant matter. These are usually found in groups of up to 20 individuals, and I found this little group of five along the edge of a woodland path, a fairly typical habitat.

180919 Shaggy inkcap (1)

180919 Shaggy inkcap (2)
180919 Shaggy inkcap (3)

Edit: My fungi friend Graham very kindly pointed out that I had mis-identified my initial find but, luckily, I saw some real Shaggy inkcaps today, so I have changed the photos above to show those.

The confusion species, which my initial photos (below) showed, was actually the Hare’s-foot inkcap (Coprinopsis lagopus). Perhaps you can see why I was confused by all that shagginess!

180919 shaggy inkcap (2)
180919 shaggy inkcap (1)
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Bute oysters

15 Saturday Sep 2018

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

autumn fungi, Bute Park, Crepidotus species, oyster fungi, oysterling fungi, Pleurotus species

180915 Oyster fungi (1)

I called this post ‘Bute oysters’ (because I found them during a wander in Cardiff’s Bute Park last week) but maybe that should be beaut oysters because there’s no denying these Oyster fungi are sculptural beauties.

180915 Oyster fungi (2)180915 Oyster fungi (3)

And I called them oysters but I’m not actually sure what they are – mostly likely some type of Oyster (Pleurotus sp.) or Oysterling (Crepidotus sp.). I gave up trying to identify fungi species a year or so back when I realised that you really need a microscope to have any chance with most of them and I decided I didn’t want to go down that route.

180915 Oyster fungi (4)180915 Oyster fungi (5)

I still enjoy looking at them and admiring their beauty though.

180915 Oyster fungi (6)

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Birding at Garwnant and Llwyn-on

23 Thursday Aug 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, fungi, nature, walks

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Crossbill, Garwnant Forestry, Glamorgan Bird Club, Llwyn-on reservoir

We birders of the Glamorgan Bird Club are tough: we don’t let almost constant drizzle put us off a good day’s birding. Heck, we even sit at picnic tables eating our lunch in the drizzle. As long as our optics (bins, ’scopes and cameras) aren’t getting damaged by the wet, we carry on.

180823 birding at Garwnant (1)

And it was certainly worth carrying on ’cause we enjoyed a magnificent day’s birding. We started off with a walk around the trails at Garwnant Forestry in the morning and followed that with a walk through the woodland to check out Llwyn-on reservoir in the afternoon.

180823 birding at Garwnant (2)

I notched up my 187th bird species for the year with the several Crossbills we spotted and heard in various locations along the forestry tracks, and we also enjoyed good sightings of Willow tits and Willow warblers, Tree pipits and Treecreepers, and more than a few Spotted flycatchers flitting in and out from the trees and shrubs in their constant search for the perfect fly snack.

180823 birding at Garwnant (3)

Crossing the Llwyn-on feeder stream after lunch, I earned some brownie points for spotting a Dipper splashing about upstream, and the Spot flies were also active along the river bank there.

180823 birding at Garwnant (4)

As we walked through the woodland at the northern end of Llwyn-on reservoir, we were amazed and delighted by the sight of thousands of tiny mushrooms (probably one of the Mycena species) growing under the conifers, as well as several large groups of False chanterelles. I even had the birders sniffing at a white mushroom to teach them why it’s called The Miller – ‘It smells of dough/flour’, they correctly said.

180823 birding at Garwnant (5)

At the reservoir we marvelled at the magical sight of over 200 House martins feeding on insects above the shallow water – luckily for the birds, the reservoir is beginning to fill again after our recent drought. And the perfect finish to a wonderful day came with the cheery sight of 3 Yellow wagtails grazing together with, perhaps, 16 Pied wagtails in the grass at the water’s edge.

180823 birding at Garwnant (6)

One of the many small streams in the area

Here’s my sightings list for the day: Blackcap, Blue Tit, Bullfinch, Buzzard, Carrion Crow, Chaffinch, Chiffchaff, Coal Tit, Cormorant, Crossbill, Dipper, Goldcrest, Goldfinch, Great Crested Grebe, Great Tit, Grey Heron, Grey Wagtail, House Martin, Jay, Lesser Black-backed Gull, Long-tailed Tit, Nuthatch, Pied Wagtail, Raven, Reed Bunting, Robin, Spotted Flycatcher, Swallow, Tree Pipit, Treecreeper, Willow Tit, Willow Warbler, Woodpigeon, Wren, and Yellow Wagtail. Also seen or heard, but not by me, were Blackbird, Great spotted woodpecker, Lesser redpoll, Sand martin and Siskin – well, I might’ve heard the Siskin but I’m not entirely sure.

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Feathers and fungi at Forest Farm

19 Monday Mar 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, fungi, nature, parks, walks

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

biodiversity, Blue tit, Blushing bracket, Brittle cinder, coal tit, Elfcups, Forest Farm, Forest Farm Nature Reserve, Great tit, Grey heron, Hairy curtain crust, Moorhen, nuthatch, Song thrush, wren

I’ve blogged about the charms of the Forest Farm Nature Reserve many times before but I thought I’d share some of the highlights from last week’s wander …

180319 Forest Farm

Oh, and I will just add that the combination of feathers – me mostly looking upwards – and fungi – eyes down – can be quite difficult. By the end of the day, I felt like one of those nodding dog ornaments you used to see in the rear windows of cars. Still, ’twas a lovely long meandering walk!

180319 Blue tit
180319 Blushing bracket
180319 Brittle cinder
180319 Coal tit
180319 Elfcups
180319 Great tit
180319 Grey heron
180319 Hairy curtain crust
180319 Moorhen
180319 Nuthatch
180319 Song thrush
180319 Wren
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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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