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Artist's Conk

Ganoderma applanatum

Description:

Ganoderma applanatum lives on hardwood, deciduous trees in clusters or individually. One can find Ganoderma applanatum growing on logs, stumps, or wounds of living/dead trees. This is a very common fungus. G. applanatum is distributed throughout the world, mostly being found in temperate and tropical zones. This fungus, however, is NOT found in deserts and prairies. Because this fungus is immotile, Ganoderma applanatum relies on wind, insects, and animals for distributing spores. Wind dissemination is the number one way of dispersing the spores, but insects and animals also have a part. The spores can catch a ride on them to move to a different location. Depending on the location G. applanatum is found, the diversity in other organisms will vary. Since this fungus lives and feeds on trees, living or dead, one will find this fungus where one would FIND deciduous, hardwood trees. Also, other organisms that live with this fungus include various numbers of insect species, from spiders to mites. One in particular that I encountered while researching was the forked fungus beetle, Bolitotherus cornutus. This insect feeds on Ganoderma applanatum. This beetle also lays one to two eggs on both the upper and lower surfaces per day, which adds up to eight to twelve eggs in total. If large enough, there could be a whole different ecosystem or habitat on or within one fruiting body. There are specific insects that only live on specific brackets. Some of these insects are so small that they live INSIDE the pores, so you can only IMAGINE what organisms depend on Ganoderma applanatum for food, shelter, and reproduction purposes. Ganoderma applanatum is mostly, if not always, found on trees. This fungus is found in many different locations in the world, but specifically, they reside on hardwood trees, which is their specific niche. In order for survival, they use the trees as a source of nutrition. They can be saproboic feeders or parasitic feeders.

Habitat:

One can find Ganoderma applanatum growing on logs, stumps, or wounds of living/dead trees. This is a very common fungus. G. applanatum is distributed throughout the world, mostly being found in temperate and tropical zones. This fungus, however, is NOT found in deserts and prairies.

Notes:

From: http://bioweb.uwlax.edu/bio203/2010/ross...

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7 Comments

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 12 years ago

You have nailed it Cecilia.J! I believe it is Ganoderma applanatum as well!

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 12 years ago

@Cecilia.J: Could you provide a reference link?

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 12 years ago

I'm sorry I was trusting the suggestion. Unfortunately neither the Birch Polypore or the Tinder Polypore resemble the beak-like structure of the fungi.

Well That is no Birch it looks like a Tinder polypore

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 12 years ago

It was on a very strange tree, similar to that of this spotting:

http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/880...

I know its not birch poly pore, what kind of tree is it on. that will help me know what kind of mushroom it is.

Jacob Gorneau
Jacob Gorneau 12 years ago

Beautifully strange fungus low on tree...

Jacob Gorneau
Spotted by
Jacob Gorneau

New York, USA

Spotted on Mar 14, 2012
Submitted on Mar 15, 2012

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