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Phlebia radiata
Phlebia radiata is an orange to pink crust fungus that spreads itself across the dead wood of hardwoods and conifers across North America. It has a wrinkled surface in which the wrinkles radiate outward, more or less, from a central location. It does not develop pores, and it does not develop a cap structure or even, usually, a folded-over edge
Ecology: Saprobic; spreading across logs and stumps of hardwoods or conifers; annual; causing a white rot; spring, summer, fall, and winter; widely distributed in North America. Fruiting Body: 1-10 cm or more across; irregular in outline; up to about 3 mm thick; surface wrinkled, with the wrinkles and folds radiating from a more or less central point; orange to pink (more rarely tan with orangish edges, or purplish); occasionally developing a slightly folded-over, hairy edge. Spore Print: White. Microscopic Features: Spores 4-5.5 x 1.5-2 µ; smooth; sausage-shaped; inamyloid. Cystidia cylindric to clavate; up to about 100 x 10 µ. Clamp connections present. ( http://www.mushroomexpert.com/phlebia_ra... )
( http://www.soortenbank.nl/soorten.php?so... ), ( http://www.mycofiel.nl/detail/phlebia%20... ),( http://www.mycobank.org/MycoTaxo.aspx?Li... ),( http://www.google.nl/#sclient=psy-ab&... ), ( http://www.rogersmushrooms.com/gallery/D... ), --- on picture [2] are 2 white different fungi to see,maybe "Mycena", and on the spotted/posted fungi, a tiny-bug. / on pic [4] is a snail to see
1 Comment
corrected the id.!!