Polypores - Non-fleshy texture, stems central or lateral


Some species in this sub-group produce fruitbodies with caps that are thin and leathery, but pliable, whereas other species produce fruitbodies with thick, corky and unpliable caps.

In the following hints you see examples of useful identification features and a few of the more commonly seen genera in which at least some species (not necessarily all) show those features.

Hints

On wood; pores radially elongated: Polyporus.

On wood; whitish cap to a centimetre or so in diameter: Panellus.

On soil; thin, brown, concentrically banded cap: Coltricia.

On soil; thick cap, brown on upper side & with white pores that bruise red: Amauroderma.

Warning

If you think you have a small-pored member of this sub-group, it pays to check with a magnifying glass or hand lens. Some species of the Caps on stems; teeth below caps group produce leathery fruitbodies in which the teeth are so densely packed that, at first glance, you might think the underside has small pores.


Polypores - Non-fleshy texture, stems central or lateral

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Discussion

HelenCross wrote:
Yesterday
Ah, I see!

Lentinus arcularius
Heinol wrote:
Yesterday
Just clarifying one point. This sighting is not the way they normally start out. It shows the final, mature state that has developed in an unsual way. Normally you'd see some stem& cap growth.

Lentinus arcularius
HelenCross wrote:
Yesterday
Well, if this conversation hadn't happened I probably wouldn't have understood that's how they start out!

Lentinus arcularius
Heinol wrote:
Yesterday
Well that was dumb of me to miss the bit of this in the other sighting you put up!

Lentinus arcularius
HelenCross wrote:
Yesterday
see the upper side of the piece of wood here: Lentinus arcularius (Fringed Polypore)

Lentinus arcularius
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