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Tag Archives: Stump puffballs

Stump puffballs

09 Friday Feb 2024

Posted by sconzani in fungi, winter

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

British fungi, Lycoperdon pyriforme, puffballs, Stump puffballs

I haven’t found much fungi lately so it was nice, during a walk earlier this week, to spot this little colony of Stump puffballs (Lycoperdon pyriforme).

I had a chuckle at this explanation of its scientific name from the First Nature website:

The genus name Lycoperdon literally means ‘wolf’s flatulence’ and just begs the question who got close enough to a wolf and stayed there long enough to become an expert on such matters. For most of us, surely such an odour cannot be a practical diagnostic feature for identifying the Stump Puffball, Lycoperdon pyriforme.
Nothing at all to do with funeral pyres, the specific epithet pyriforme comes from Latin and simply means pear shaped.

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278/365 Happy National Fungi Day!

05 Saturday Oct 2019

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

#NationalFungiDay, bracket fungi, British fungi, Candlesnuff, fungus, National Fungi Day, oysterling fungi, Stump puffballs, Sulphur tuft, waxcaps

As today was National Fungi Day in Britain and we’ve had good quantities of the rain needed to stimulate fungal growth, I caught the train in to Cardiff today for a fungi foray around Heath Park and the new part of Cathays Cemetery. Here are some of the fungi I found …

191005 fungi (19)
191005 fungi (6)
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191005 fungi (9)
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191005 fungi (17)
191005 fungi (13)
191005 fungi (5)
191005 fungi (1)
191005 fungi (8)
191005 fungi (14)
191005 fungi (11)
191005 fungi (2)
191005 fungi (10)
191005 fungi (22)
191005 fungi (18)
191005 fungi (20)
191005 fungi (21)
191005 fungi (4)
191005 fungi (3)

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It’s Fungi Friday!

17 Friday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in autumn, fungi, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

#FungiFriday, Apricot Club, Candlesnuff fungi, Cathays Cemetery, Clouded funnel, club fungi, Cortinarius, fungi, fungus, Heath Park, Stump puffballs, Trooping funnel

I needed a fungi fix so went for a wander around a couple of my old haunts, Heath Park and Cathays Cemetery, both in Cardiff. Here’s what I found …

171117 fungi (2)
171117 fungi (3)
171117 fungi (4)
171117 fungi (5)
171117 fungi (6)
171117 fungi (7)
171117 fungi (8)
171117 fungi (9)
171117 fungi (10)
171117 fungi (11)
171117 fungi (12)
171117 fungi (13)
171117 fungi (14)
171117 fungi (1)

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Fungi Friday: Stump puffballs

28 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by sconzani in fungi, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

biodiversity recording, biological recording, Lycoperdon pyriforme, SEWBReC, species of the month, Stump puffballs

I’m a dedicated wildlife recorder, inputting my sightings of flora and fauna into the database of my local records centre, SEWBReC (the South East Wales Biodiversity Records Centre). Each month the team at SEWBReC nominates a species that is poorly recorded in their system, in that hope that recorders like me will search high and low to help augment their records. The reason is that if record numbers are low, you can’t tell whether a species is endangered or just under-recorded, so it’s important to record even the most common things.

161027-stump-puffballs-1

The October species of the month is a case in point. The Stump puffball (Lycoperdon pyriforme) is really common throughout Britain, yet the SEWBReC database had only 167 records at the start of the month. Well, I can tell you it will have a whole lot more by the end of October, because I’ve seen them almost everywhere I go and I’ve been photographing and recording them all. It’s the only British puffball to grow on wood so it’s easy to identify, and it often grows in large colonies – as one fungi expert put it, it’s ‘the banana of the fungi world, its bunches create impressive vistas’.

161027-stump-puffballs-2
161027-stump-puffballs-3

For more on SEWBReC’s species of the month, see here. If you live in the area, or even if you’re just visiting, you can help by recording your sightings.

161027-stump-puffballs-4
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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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