Other non-black fungi


 

As the heading suggests, this subgroup holds a mixed-bag of on-wood leftovers. A few examples of what you find in this subgroup are:

 

Some polypores. Mostly these would be the flat or sheet-like polypores (technically resupinate polypores), commonly found on the lower surfaces of dead or live wood. There are also a few species that produce pendant fruitbodies (and most likely to be seen in the Canberra Nature Map area are the rusty-brown Coltriciella fruitbodies on the underside of rotting wood).

 

Corticioid fungi. Mostly these occur on the underside of dead wood lying on the ground, though a few are found on live wood. Mostly the fruitbody is fairly thin (often like a coat of paint or a skin on the wood) and many have featureless surfaces, so it is understandable to see them sometimes called paint fungi. However, the surface may be rough (e.g. warted, toothed, densely wrinkled), though the roughness is usually under a millimetre in depth. Furthermore, fruitbodies range from a thin and almost invisible wash to densely cobwebby to leathery in texture.

 

Septobasidium. The fruitbodies in this genus are brown, velvety patches that appear on branches of live plants. Though the fruitbodies appear on wood, the fungi parasitize scale insects and under a velvety Septobasidium patch you will find scale insects.  

 


Other non-black fungi

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Discussion

Hejor1 wrote:
18 Dec 2025
@Heinol yes it was on the underside!

Hymenochaete
Heinol wrote:
18 Dec 2025
Looks very much like a species of Hymenochaete. Did you turn the wood over to photograph this? I ask because, to allow optimum spore dispersal, Hymenochate fruitbodies need to be facing more-or-less downward.

Hymenochaete
Heinol wrote:
1 Dec 2025
One of the jelly fungi - perhaps a Heterotextus.

zzz puzzles on wood
Heinol wrote:
7 Nov 2025
@Hejor1 sometimes the sexual and asexual states of a given fungus appear at the same time but it is also common to see just one state alone. The different states may need different triggers to start their development.

zzz puzzles on wood
Hejor1 wrote:
6 Nov 2025
@Heinol this is fascinating, thank you! I see these (or something similar) on exposed, weathered but hard wood just as you say. They aren't exclusive to the shaded side of the wood either - they're all over. I don't have any pictures of black lips and I can't recall seeing them. They were probably present but I didn't notice/realise I was looking at fungi so didn't photograph them. I will certainly be in the lookout from now on!!

zzz puzzles on wood
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