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Phylloporus sp.

Phylloporus sp. at Carwoola, NSW

Phylloporus sp. at Carwoola, NSW - 4 Apr 2020 12:00 AM
Phylloporus sp. at Carwoola, NSW - 4 Apr 2020 12:00 AM
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Identification history

Phylloporus sp. 5 Apr 2020 Pam
Phylloporus sp. 5 Apr 2020 Pam
Phylloporus sp. 5 Apr 2020 Pam
Phylloporus sp. 5 Apr 2020 Pam
Phylloporus sp. 5 Apr 2020 Pam
Phylloporus sp. 5 Apr 2020 Pam
Phylloporus sp. 4 Apr 2020 Zoed
Phylloporus sp. 4 Apr 2020 Zoed
Phylloporus sp. 4 Apr 2020 Zoed

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9 comments

Pam wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Great to see so many of these fungi turning up in your region. They belong to the same group of fungi as the 'bolete' fungi though this genus has gills rather than pores. They are mycorrhizal, that is associated with the roots of nearby plants with both organisms benefiting. It is interesting to note, if you can, to see if this species has white or yellow mycelium at the base of it's stem. There are many unnamed species in this genus in Australia and unfortunately many have been incorrectly labelled with names of overseas species.
Pam wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Great to see so many of these fungi turning up in your region. They belong to the same group of fungi as the 'bolete' fungi though this genus has gills rather than pores. They are mycorrhizal, that is associated with the roots of nearby plants with both organisms benefiting. It is interesting to note, if you can, to see if this species has white or yellow mycelium at the base of it's stem. There are many unnamed species in this genus in Australia and unfortunately many have been incorrectly labelled with names of overseas species.
Pam wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Great to see so many of these fungi turning up in your region. They belong to the same group of fungi as the 'bolete' fungi though this genus has gills rather than pores. They are mycorrhizal, that is associated with the roots of nearby plants with both organisms benefiting. It is interesting to note, if you can, to see if this species has white or yellow mycelium at the base of it's stem. There are many unnamed species in this genus in Australia and unfortunately many have been incorrectly labelled with names of overseas species.
Pam wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Great to see so many of these fungi turning up in your region. They belong to the same group of fungi as the 'bolete' fungi though this genus has gills rather than pores. They are mycorrhizal, that is associated with the roots of nearby plants with both organisms benefiting. It is interesting to note, if you can, to see if this species has white or yellow mycelium at the base of it's stem. There are many unnamed species in this genus in Australia and unfortunately many have been incorrectly labelled with names of overseas species.
Pam wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Great to see so many of these fungi turning up in your region. They belong to the same group of fungi as the 'bolete' fungi though this genus has gills rather than pores. They are mycorrhizal, that is associated with the roots of nearby plants with both organisms benefiting. It is interesting to note, if you can, to see if this species has white or yellow mycelium at the base of it's stem. There are many unnamed species in this genus in Australia and unfortunately many have been incorrectly labelled with names of overseas species.
Pam wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Great to see so many of these fungi turning up in your region. They belong to the same group of fungi as the 'bolete' fungi though this genus has gills rather than pores. They are mycorrhizal, that is associated with the roots of nearby plants with both organisms benefiting. It is interesting to note, if you can, to see if this species has white or yellow mycelium at the base of it's stem. There are many unnamed species in this genus in Australia and unfortunately many have been incorrectly labelled with names of overseas species.
Zoed wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Thanks Pam. I'm planning to head back into the reserve for some more walks this week. I'll take a real camera with me and try to get better detail. There were some more very beautiful but tiny fungi species ... I thought it would be worth capturing them while the conditions are so good!
Zoed wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Thanks Pam. I'm planning to head back into the reserve for some more walks this week. I'll take a real camera with me and try to get better detail. There were some more very beautiful but tiny fungi species ... I thought it would be worth capturing them while the conditions are so good!
Zoed wrote:
   6 Apr 2020
Thanks Pam. I'm planning to head back into the reserve for some more walks this week. I'll take a real camera with me and try to get better detail. There were some more very beautiful but tiny fungi species ... I thought it would be worth capturing them while the conditions are so good!

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Location information

Sighting information

Species information

  • Phylloporus sp. Scientific name
  • Phylloporus sp. Common name
  • Not Sensitive
  • Local native
  • Non-invasive or negligible
  • Up to 764m Recorded at altitude
  • Machine learning
1,904,751 sightings of 21,315 species from 13,114 contributors
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