The fruit body is a polypore that grows out from wood. In shape it is often somewhat like a horse’s hoof (roughly triangular in cross-section with the lower surface horizontal, the upper sloping) and the vertical third side flush against the woody substrate), but sometimes a little flatter. It may grow to 40 centimetres in its longest dimension. When fresh, the smooth upper surface is a pale brown and the whitish to faintly yellowish underside is densely packed with tiny pores. However, often you don’t see those fresh features, since the fruit bodies are usually attacked by invertebrates fairly quickly and then numerous chew holes show themselves.
An old fruit body, if it escapes the ravages of invertebrates, is likely to develop irregular, polygonal cracking, both on the upper surface and on the underside. You then see that there is only a thin, brownish skin on the upper surface, the underlying flesh being white. In this photo (https://www.anbg.gov.au/fungi/images-captions/laetiporus-portentosus-0049.html), taken in Black Mountain, the upper surface has started cracking and you can see some streaks of exposed, white flesh.
Fallen, chewed-out fruit bodies may lose all evidence of the initial form and then look like odd lumps of polystyrene, especially as this is a very low-density polypore.
This fungus is fairly common in our region, on live trees of various species but is also found on dead wood. Often it is found singly, but two or more fruit bodies may appear close together.
Look-alikes
There is probably no species with the same combination of chunkiness, size, density and chew holes. Ryvardenia cretacea, not yet recorded from our region, is somewhat similar but has a brittle, chalky texture and appears to escape being chewed and looking like polystyrene. G. Gates and D. Ratkowsky (A Field Guide to Tasmanian Fungi, 2nd. ed, 2016, page 193) say that “When overmature, it falls off the wood and becomes chalk-like lumps on the forest floor”.
Laetiporus portentosus is listed in the following regions:
Canberra & Southern Tablelands | Albury, Wodonga | South Coast | Hunter Region | Loddon Mallee
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Synonyms
Piptoporus eucalyptorum (Fr.) Warcup, Ecology Forests Woodlands South Australia: 131 (1986) Piptoporus portentosus (Berk.) G. Cunn., Bull. N.Z. Dept. Sci. Industr. Res., Pl. Dis. Div. 164: 106 (1965) Piptoporus eucalyptorum Piptoporus portentosusMaps
9 Mile Hill TSR Albury Alison Hone Reserve ANBG Aranda Bushland Biamanga National Park Black Mountain Block 402 Bodalla State Forest Boro Bournda Environment Education Centre Bournda National Park Broulee Moruya Nature Observation Area Bruce Ridge Callum Brae Campbell Park Woodland Cantor Crescent Woodland, Higgins City Renewal Authority Area Cooma North Ridge Reserve Cuumbeun Nature Reserve Dryandra St Woodland Gorman Road Bush Reserve, Goulburn Goulburn Mulwaree Council Gungaderra Grasslands Higgins Woodland Holtze Close Neighbourhood Park Illilanga & Baroona Kama Kambah Pool Kangaroo Valley LB Block Mcleods Creek Res (Gundaroo) Meroo National Park Molonglo River Reserve Monga National Park Mongarlowe River Mount Ainslie Mount Imlay National Park Mount Jerrabomberra Mount Jerrabomberra QP Mount Majura Mount Mugga Mugga Mount Painter Nail Can Hill Namadgi National Park Piney Ridge Red Hill Nature Reserve Reservoir Hill, Lawson Rugosa SCR380 at Windellama Stirling Park Stony Creek Nature Reserve Tallaganda State Forest The Pinnacle Tidbinbilla Nature Reserve Tuggeranong Hill Umbagong District Park West Goulburn Bushland Reserve WodongaSurvey points
GG86 Point 122Places
Acton, ACT Bawley Point, NSW Bournda, NSW Bruce, ACT Cook, ACT Crace, ACT Dalton, NSW Deakin, ACT Denman Prospect, ACT Goulburn, NSW Gundaroo, NSW Hall, ACT Kangaroo Valley, NSW Kingsdale, NSW Lawson, ACT Moruya, NSW O'Connor, ACT Paddys River, ACT Quaama, NSW Symonston, ACT Taradale, VIC Windellama, NSW