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Thread: What is this?

  1. #1
    Registered User kayak karl's Avatar
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    Default What is this?

    pic taken in NH/ME area





    http://outdoors.webshots.com/photo/2...vhost=outdoors
    you can magnify on this link.
    I'm so confused, I'm not sure if I lost my horse or found a rope.

  2. #2
    Registered User Grimelowe's Avatar
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    Default I'm really a fungi, you'll love my sense of humor...

    Looks like fungi to me... that was easy. Now the hard question... what type of fungi is it?

  3. #3
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    It kinda looks like Chicken Mushroom. But it's hard for me to tell by a picture. I have to be looking at it with my book in my hand.

    It might also be Jack O'Lantern...

  4. #4
    Registered User Grimelowe's Avatar
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    Default Maybe?

    Chicken of the woods: Laetiporus sulphureus : Sulfur Shelf
    How to identify it: Bright to dull orange shelf fungus with yellow underside, usually growing in stacks. Fall timing.

  5. #5
    Registered User Grimelowe's Avatar
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    Laetiporus cincinnatus (Morgan) Burdsall, Banik, & Volk has recently been recognized as a separate species from Laetiporus sulphureus (Fr.) Murr. (We accomplished this in a paper with this citation: Banik, Mark T., Harold H. Burdsall, Jr. and Thomas J. Volk. 1998. Identification of groups within Laetiporus sulphureus in the United States based on RFLP analysis of the nuclear ribosomal DNA. Folia Cryptogamica Estonia 33: 9-14). It has also been called Laetiporus sulphureus var. semialbinus (although that nomenclatural combination was never "legally" made). Laetiporus cincinnatus is the correct name in Laetiporus because "cincinnatus" is the earliest available epithet at the genus level, having been described by Morgan (a high school teacher near Cincinnati) in 1885 as Polyporus cincinnatus. Peck's description of Polyporus sulphureus var. semialbinus did not come until 1905. Thus, according to priority, Laetiporus cincinnatus is the correct combination.



    It kind of looks similar.

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