Sunday, November 11, 2012
Fog and Fungi
A while back I posted about threats to the future of the Bishop of Durham's deer park at Auckland Park, in Bishop Auckland in County Durham. Thankfully these seem to have abated, much to the relief of all those who love the place. It's one of our favourite Sunday morning walks - even in the fog.
The park is at its best in autumn ....
.... especially when fog adds a touch of liquid magic to the spiders' webs.
I think it was Oliver Rackham, the noted tree and woodland expert, who once remarked that the only thing more useful to wildlife than a live tree was a dead tree. He was referring to the vast range of organisms - invertebrates, fungi, etc. - that live in or on the dead wood during a tree's protracted afterlife. Whoever manages the park at Bishop Auckland leaves plenty of dead wood for the benefit of organisms that thrive on it - like these tiers of bracket fungi (Ganoderma sp. I think) in the hollow trunk of this dead beech.
Some of the living beeches are under attack by honey fungus and their days are numbered - but there are also plenty of healthy trees and some replanting.
The stumps of old sweet chestnuts host these developing puffballs.
Sycamore, with the black spots of Rhytisma acerinum on the leaf blade.
Some of the living trees have magnificent rings of toadstools around their bases - I guess that these are a mycorrhizal species, that exist in a mutually beneficial association with the trees.
Not sure what these are, on a decaying beech stump. During the prolonged afterlife of the dead trees a whole succession of toadstools appear, some for just a few days.
A grand walk round....it is Artist Fungus growing in the Beech.
ReplyDeleteThis are all excellent finds and the shots as always are my envy! Fogs visit us once-in-a while during colder months of Nov-Dec, but i don't see these beautiful webs fully laden with dew. I only see them in blogs, maybe water here evaporate so fast before i can get to them.
ReplyDeletePhil, now i remember something, are you the one who goes back to my NOID red fruit but it is still unanswered? I actually forgot about that, but I already know it, Capparis micracantha! Sorry about the delay.
Thanks Adrian, saved me thumbing through my toadstool book!
ReplyDeleteGreetings Andrea, I remember finding the very attractive Capparis spinosa (the source of culinary capers) on Mediterranean cliffs when I was a student.
ReplyDeleteJust bought what I hope will be excellent new book on Fungi by Peter Marren -looks stunning
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