plums and custard (Tricholomposis rutilans)
It seems to have been an excellent year for fungus - whether this is part of a national pattern or a response to the stacks of rotting wood we have built about the place since coming here, I'm not sure.
There are around 14,500 species of wild fungus recorded in the UK - more than eight times more than there are flowering plants.
This stunner is new to us this year - Plums and Custard (Tricholomposis rutilans). It gets its name from the way it looks not tastes: being very bitter and inedible, it's not one for the frying pan. Only about 12 species of our native fungus are good or tasty to eat.
The specimen we found has a striking plum or claret coloured cap although I understand that cap colour can be variable.
custard yellow gills |
creamy white spores |
Obligingly, this one was growing on a pine stump - just as the books tell us it should do!
The mycelia of fungus are its' hair like 'roots' and are present throughout the year. The fruiting body which in this case is beautifully plum-coloured emerges briefly to cast its spores.
Dead or decaying matter is vital for healthy woodland biodiversity.
Saproxylic organisms (pertaining to dead or decaying wood) are those that are involved in or dependent on the process of fungal decay of wood, or on the products of that decay, and which are associated with living as well as dead trees.
They vary from woodpeckers to fungi. Over most of Europe saproxylic organisms are under threat, due to the removal of woodland cover and impoverishment of what remains (Speight 1989).
It seems plums and custard could be making a tasty meal for woodland wildlife after all. Just not me!