A very rewarding autumn for fungal forays, so far.
Here are a few recent finds in Teesdale, Weardale and around Durham city
I think this is probably southern bracket Ganoderma australe, growing on an old beech tree in Stanhope dene. The black colouration is probably due to several days of heavy rain, soaking the surface. There were about a dozen of these on the trunk. They weaken the tree and the trunk usually snaps in high winds, about 10-15 feet above ground. The brackets are perennial and produce an annual crop of spores over a decade or more.
A beech stump, infested with old southern brackets
Trooping funnel Clitocybe geotropa, part of a fairy ring in Weardale that appears in this spot, under old hazel coppice, every autumn
Crimped gill Plicatura crispa, a Scottish species that's moving into northern counties of England. On dead horse chestnut branches, at Egglestone in Teesdale
Common puffballs Lycoperdon perlatum, in vast numbers, under Norway spruce in Hamsterley forest
Common puffballs Lycoperdon perlatum in Durham University Botanic Garden
Hairy curtain crust Stereum hirsutum in Stanhope dene, Weardale
Possibly a wood blewit Lepista nuda (?) that has had some of the colour washed out of it by rain? Low Barns Nature reserve, Durham
Turkey tail Trametes versicolor in Durham University Botanic Garden
Honey fungus Armillaria mellea on an ash tree at Wolsingham in Weardale
Wood blewit Lepista nuda in Hamsterley forest, Durham
Sulphur tuft Hypholoma fasciculare Weardale
Clouded agaric Clitocybe nebularis in Durham University Botanic Garden, where it forms spectacular fairy rings
Unidentified, Durham University Botanic Garden
Angel bonnets Mycena archangelica on a fallen beech branch, Durham University Botanic Garden
Candle snuff Xylaria hypoxylon, Egglesone, Teesdale
Bitter bracket Postia styptica (?), Durham University Botanic Garden
Collared earthstar Geastrum triplex, under an old ash tree in Hollingside lane, Durham city
Collared earthstars discharging spores after being hit by raindrops
Upright coral Ramaria stricta (or maybe the less common R. abietina?) under Korean fir Abies koreana, in Durham University Botanic Garden
Shaggy scalycap Pholiota squarrosa on a Californian redwood in the arboretum of Durham University Botanic Garden