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Tag Archives: Small stagshorn

Clubs and stagshorns

19 Friday Nov 2021

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

British fungi, club fungi, Handsome club, Small stagshorn, Yellow club

The one in which we look at yellow stick-like fungi, poking up out of the ground, or wood.

211119 handsome club (1)
211119 handsome club (2)

Club fungi can be difficult to identify positively so I can’t be completely sure of my names here, though I have had some help from an expert. So, this first fungus, found in local deciduous woodland, is probably Handsome club (Clavulinopsis laeticolor).

211119 yellow club

This next club fungus looks superficially similar to the last but this one had sprouted in mossy grassland, meaning it is likely Yellow club (Clavulinopsis helvola).

211119 small stagshorn

And this third yellow stick-like fungus is paler, almost translucent and jelly-like, and was flourishing on decaying wood. I’m fairly sure this is Small stagshorn (Calocera cornea).

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Fungi Friday: Of stagshorns and spindles

23 Friday Dec 2016

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Calocera cornea, Calocera pallidospathulata, Clavaria fragilis, Clavaria fumosa, Pale Stagshorn, Small stagshorn, Smoky Spindles, White Spindles

Though the word stagshorn might conjure up images of majestic antlered beasts, I’ve got more small stuff for you today. In fact, the Small stagshorns (Calocera cornea) grow no more than 12mm tall so small is an over-statement.

161223-1-calocera-cornea-small-stagshorn
161223-2-calocera-cornea-small-stagshorn

The Stagshorns are jelly fungi so feel spongy when poked and that’s reflected in their scientific name: Calo comes from the ancient Greek καλός (kalos) which means beautiful, cēra is Latin for wax, and cornea is from the Latin cornu meaning horn-shaped, thus beautiful wax horns. The English name staghorn seems a little odd though as these fungi usually remain single stalked and unbranching.

161223-3-calocera-pallidospathulata-pale-stagshorn
161223-4-calocera-pallidospathulata-pale-stagshorn

There are two other species of Calocera to be found in Britain, though I have only photographed one so far, the Pale Stagshorn (Calocera pallidospathulata), shown above. All are small and grow on wood, and this is one of the characteristics that distinguishes them from the Spindles, as they grow in unimproved grassland (i.e. grassland which has not been improved with fertilisers or lime – I find Spindles often in my local cemetery which has been closed to burials for more than 30 years).

161223-5-clavaria-fragilis-white-spindles
161223-6-clavaria-fumosa-smokey-spindles

The White Spindles (Clavaria fragilis), above left, and Smoky Spindles (Clavaria fumosa), right, are two examples of these. Though sometimes forming clumps, Stagshorns tend to grow singly, whereas Spindles prefer to clump together, like little beds of eels or worms standing on end. Clavaria comes from the Latin word for club, which is why the Spindles as a group are often referred to as Club fungi.

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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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