A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife
Trametes gibbosa
Trametes gibbosa is typically 5 to 20 cm across and roughly semicircular when growing as brackets but more or less circular when growing as a fan on the top of a stump. It has leathery flesh and is white or brownish often with a pinkish tinge near to the rim. Brackets vary greatly in thickness but are usually between 1 and 6 cm thick. The margins are rounded in young specimens, which are downy on the upper surface, but as fruitbodies age so the upper surface usually becomes coated with green algae and loses its down, while the margins become more acute. The tubes are white to light grey, 3 to 15 mm deep and spaced 0.5-1 mm apart, terminating in irregular, elongated and maze-like pores that are cream at first and turn ochre with age.
The lumpy bracket occurs in most temperate regions of Europe. This species is also found in parts of Asia. In 2007 Trametes gibbosa was confirmed for the first time in the USA and Canada. This bracket fungus can be seen on many kinds of broadleaf trees, but most commonly on beech or sycamore. It is a saprobic fungus and causes white rot.
Spotted in Nieuwe Rande Forest in rural area of Deventer, Holland. I went back a few weeks later and took photos of the same bracket (photo 1), see here http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/139... (sources:see reference)
No Comments