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Brown hairy on abies
Marja Pennanen,
13-05-2010 11:12
Fruitbodies are under 0,5 mm wide.
Hans-Otto Baral,
13-05-2010 11:14
Re:Brown hairy on abies
Looks like a Brunnipila? Pinus twig? make it mor emoist and keep it.
Zotto
Zotto
Marja Pennanen,
13-05-2010 11:22
Marja Pennanen,
13-05-2010 11:26
Re:Brown hairy on abies
Hello Zotto,
you are fast :)
It was a Picea abies-twig with Lophium on it too.
This reminds Lachnum calyculiforme, but on conifers, odd.
Should check these Brunnipilas (unknown to me).
Marja
you are fast :)
It was a Picea abies-twig with Lophium on it too.
This reminds Lachnum calyculiforme, but on conifers, odd.
Should check these Brunnipilas (unknown to me).
Marja
Hans-Otto Baral,
13-05-2010 11:27
Re:Brown hairy on abies
Difficult to see on your photo, but I assume Brunnipila calyculiformis. Was it Pinus?
Hans-Otto Baral,
13-05-2010 11:29
Re:Brown hairy on abies
Brunnipila may rarely go on conifers, but the species limits are far from easy.
Zotto
Zotto
Marja Pennanen,
13-05-2010 11:39
Re:Brown hairy on abies
Ok,
thans for fast answers :)
Lachnum calyculiforme and this B. calyculiformis seems to be synonyms.
Marja
thans for fast answers :)
Lachnum calyculiforme and this B. calyculiformis seems to be synonyms.
Marja
Marja Pennanen,
14-06-2013 22:19
Re : Brown hairy on abies
Hello forum,
remembered this, when I found brown hairy ascos on Picea abies yesterday.
They were growing together with Lachnum virgineum.
These were just much more scanty than L. virgineum.
I searched a bit more the area, where Picea had been thinned out some years ago and there were piles of branches lying on the ground.
These were scanty, but quite common there and could be found from nearly any pile.
Picea and Pinus forest are here very common and I suppose, that B. calyculiformis is not even rare on conifers, should the circumstances be right.
Determining using keys may not be easy...
Greetings from a place near Russian border: Marja
remembered this, when I found brown hairy ascos on Picea abies yesterday.
They were growing together with Lachnum virgineum.
These were just much more scanty than L. virgineum.
I searched a bit more the area, where Picea had been thinned out some years ago and there were piles of branches lying on the ground.
These were scanty, but quite common there and could be found from nearly any pile.
Picea and Pinus forest are here very common and I suppose, that B. calyculiformis is not even rare on conifers, should the circumstances be right.
Determining using keys may not be easy...
Greetings from a place near Russian border: Marja

