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dead man's finger

Xylaria polymorpha

Description:

Xylaria polymorpha, commonly known as dead man's fingers, is a saprobic fungi. It is a common inhabitant of forest and woodland areas, usually growing from the bases of rotting or injured tree stumps and decaying wood[4]. It has also been known to colonise substrates like woody legume pods, petioles, and herbaceous stems. It is characterized by its elongated upright, clavate, or strap-like stromata poking up through the ground, much like fingers. The genus Xylaria contains about 100 species of cosmopolitan fungi. Polymorpha means “many forms.[3]” As its name suggests, it has a very variable but often club-shaped fruiting body (stroma) resembling burned wood. -- Often this fungus is found with a multitude of separate “digits” but at times the individual parts[1] will be fused together.

Habitat:

Belonging to the class of fungus known as Ascomycetes (division Mycota) known as the sac fungi, they are characterized by a saclike structure, the ascus,[5] which contains anything from four to eight ascospores in the sexual stage. The sac fungi are separated into subgroups based on whether asci arise singly or are borne in one of several types of fruiting structures, or ascocarps, and on the method of discharge of the ascospores. Many ascomycetes are plant pathogens, some are animal pathogens, a few are edible mushrooms, and many live on dead organic matter (as saprobes). The largest and most commonly known ascomycetes include the morel and the truffle, however the polymorpha is an inedible variety.

Notes:

The dark fruiting body[2] (often black or brown, but sometimes shades of blue/green) is surprisingly white [6] on the inside, with a blackened dotted area all around. This blackened surrounding area is made up of tiny structures called perithecia. The perithecia hold a layer of asci which contain the ascospores. The asci elongate into the ostiole, and discharge the ascospores outward. The spore distribution is a lengthy process, sometimes taking several months to complete this part of the life cycle, this is not a common trait amongst fungi, as is normally a much swifter process. -----In springtime this fungus often produces a layer of white or bluish asexual spores called conidia, which grow on its surface and surrounding area. --- at picture [6] is very good the perithecia to see, which hold those layer of asci ("which contain the ascospores")

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6 Comments

AlexKonig
AlexKonig 11 years ago

dogs eat a lot of weird things, everywhere is posted that these fungi is inedible but till now haven.t i read that they would be toxic, not for human or animal. !! Also can i nowhere find that they have any substances which could be harmful. Try to search a little bit further, but i think you don't have to worry that much. cheers

Josie3
Josie3 11 years ago

I am so glad that I came across this site - in the past couple of weeks, our back yard has been covered in these "dead man's fingers" and I am JUST now able to identify what they are! However, I still wonder, are they toxic? How do we get rid of them? We have a nice little fenced in yard and two small pug dogs that love to run around - BUT we discovered the mushrooms when they started munching on what we thought was just the grass - but I now think it was the mushrooms! We are afraid to have them find more and get sick from eating them. I will be looking for more info, but additional thoughts or info that you have on this would be great!!

AlexKonig
AlexKonig 12 years ago

thanks guys

Mark Ridgway
Mark Ridgway 12 years ago

Now that makes me hungry.

Leuba Ridgway
Leuba Ridgway 12 years ago

good series of photos - very interesting indeed !

arlanda
arlanda 12 years ago

Fascinating!

AlexKonig
Spotted by
AlexKonig

Landgraaf, Limburg, Netherlands

Spotted on Oct 14, 2011
Submitted on Oct 18, 2011

Spotted for Mission

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