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Hemlock Varnish Shelf fungus, Ganoderma tsugae
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Jun 19, 2022 09:46:12   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
Thanks Hereford!

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Jun 19, 2022 09:47:13   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
St.Mary's wrote:
Ye gads! Body snatchers on the way to maturity. Run and never fall asleep.


Be glad you're not a dead Hemlock!

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Jun 19, 2022 10:04:19   #
raymondh Loc: Walker, MI
 
Narrative , photography

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Jun 19, 2022 10:26:12   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
raymondh wrote:
Narrative , photography


Double thanks RaymondH!

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Jun 19, 2022 10:41:52   #
StanMac Loc: Tennessee
 
Excellent images, Mr. B.

Stan

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Jun 19, 2022 16:52:23   #
Manglesphoto Loc: 70 miles south of St.Louis
 
Mr. B wrote:
I found this fungi while on an archeological survey in eastern Connecticut. Having never seen it before I had to do some research and found an excellent article by Michael W. Hopping on the university of North Carolina Blog (uncpressblog.com). To quote Dr. Hopping:

"The polypores or bracket fungi are a diverse assemblage of wood rotters whose members typically dress in bureaucratic browns, grays, or dirty whites. Timid nonconformists might opt for a striped cap, decorative scales, a hairy upper surface, or mossy accents. But even here, among the ranks of work-a-day polypores, can be found a few in open rebellion against drab expectations. In the Southern Appalachians the little red corvette of these miscreants is the Hemlock Varnish Shelf, Ganoderma tsugae, also known as Hemlock Reishi.

As a group, young varnish shelf mushrooms set themselves apart with a dry but shiny (varnished) upper surface. Four species are currently recognized in the Carolinas. Two inhabit deciduous trees, one prefers pine. Not surprisingly, the Hemlock Varnish Shelf specializes in Eastern Hemlock but can also occur in firs and possibly other conifers.

Each spring a new crop of brackets, first appearing as soft white balls, sprout on the trunk or at the base of an infected tree, log, or stump. The developing mushrooms morph into fan-shaped caps up to 31 cm wide. These are anchored by short, stout stalks to the fungus hidden in the wood or tree roots. The shiny upper surface of growing caps is brightly colored, often in flaming shades of red or orange and peripherally zoned with a band of yellow then white at the cap margin. The underside is also whitish, consisting of a densely packed field of tiny (4-6/mm) pore openings. Damage to the pore surface causes a brown discoloration. Although white parts of the Hemlock Varnish Shelf are edible when young, the flesh soon becomes tough and unpleasantly bitter.


By mid-summer the caps have matured and begun to fade. The top darkens to a uniform reddish brown or burgundy. Any residual varnish shine may disappear under a brown dusting of spores. The once white pore surface and interior flesh turn brown as well.

Ganoderma tsugae is prized in the alternative medical community by virtue of its very close relationship to Lingzhi, a Ganoderma species with a 2000 year history of medicinal use in China. In Japan it is called Reishi. Science long knew it as G. lucidum, a rotter of deciduous trees. But genetic analyses of specimens obtained from around the world have complicated matters. The classical concept of “G. lucidum” proved to contain several species, and these possess widely differing amounts of the compounds thought to benefit health. Ongoing studies are needed to confirm therapeutic activity and which species are good for what. A conservative overview of the clinical state of affairs is accessible at https://www.mskcc.org/cancer-care/integrative-medicine/herbs/reishi-mushroom"
I found this fungi while on an archeological surve... (show quote)



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Jun 19, 2022 18:13:18   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
StanMac wrote:
Excellent images, Mr. B.

Stan


Thank you Stan.

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Jun 19, 2022 19:09:03   #
PAR4DCR Loc: A Sunny Place
 
Very interesting images Mr. B.

Don

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Jun 19, 2022 22:38:47   #
Abo
 
A fungus amongus

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Jun 19, 2022 23:28:24   #
RodeoMan Loc: St Joseph, Missouri
 
Some bracket mushrooms are called "artist conks". When they are new or fresh, if they are cut, incision shows up dark and remains that way. Scenes can be created on them. As they say, you can google it.

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Jun 20, 2022 06:49:04   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
PAR4DCR wrote:
Very interesting images Mr. B.

Don


Don,
Thanks. I had never seen one quite like it myself.
Alton

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Jun 20, 2022 06:50:07   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
Abo wrote:
A fungus amongus


Shoot Abo, that would have been a great title for the post!

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Jun 20, 2022 06:51:30   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
RodeoMan wrote:
Some bracket mushrooms are called "artist conks". When they are new or fresh, if they are cut, incision shows up dark and remains that way. Scenes can be created on them. As they say, you can google it.


Years ago my mother would paint scenes on the larger ones once they were dried.

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Jun 20, 2022 22:55:18   #
RodeoMan Loc: St Joseph, Missouri
 
Mr. B wrote:
Years ago my mother would paint scenes on the larger ones once they were dried.


Thanks for your response. Now folks will know that this wasn't just something I dreamed up.

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Jun 21, 2022 06:20:25   #
Mr. B Loc: eastern Connecticut
 
RodeoMan wrote:
Thanks for your response. Now folks will know that this wasn't just something I dreamed up.



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