urbpan: (dandelion)
 photo IMG_0595_zps1bbdf829.jpg
I took a walk with Charlie yesterday in the Stony Brook Reservation. With my camera out of commission I've been using my phone to take pictures. I got a self-timer app to take photos like this. Since it was overcast and raining with very low light conditions, most of my pictures are terrible.

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Yesterday I went with @WildDedham and three other hikers for a ramble in the Dedham Town Forest. Most people, including Dedhamites, have never heard of the forest, and that's kind of a nice thing. Ideally it will receive some conservation attention before it becomes well-known to the public. Since it's fairly isolated and fenced in, there's very little in the way of invasive species there. One idea is to complete the fencing to create an exclosure keeping deer out, then plant other native plants (the ones like trillium, that deer tend to graze out of existence) and preserve the place as a native forest plant sanctuary, like Garden in the Woods.

Anyway, it was a pretty amazing place, and we stayed for three hours despite some of the worst mosquito activity I've ever experienced. The mushroom hunting was the best I've ever seen.

21 pictures )
urbpan: (cold)

photos by [livejournal.com profile] cottonmanifesto
Urban species #065: Birch polypore Piptoporus betulina

Twice before in this series (red tree brain and black knot) we have seen fungi that are specific about what trees they infect. Here we return to the theme with birch polypore ("polypore" refers to the many small holes that make up the spore-producing underside). Birch polypore is a mushroom produced by a fungus that only infects birch trees (one source claims that it occurs "rarely on beech"). It can infect living trees as a parasite, and when the tree sickens, whether due to the fungus or other cause, it will feed on the dead wood. Seldom will you encounter a dead birch tree without several birch polypore mushrooms on it.

The fungus is also called "razor strop," because apparently its flesh can be used to hone a blade. The dry spongy mushroom can also be used as tinder, and may have medicinal uses. The well-preserved 5000 year old corpse of a man found in the alps was found to have a couple pieces of birch polypore threaded on a cord, on his person. What value these specimens had to the man is a matter for speculation and contemplation.

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