Sunday, 20 September 2020
'Smooth, shiny, wavy, rich chestnut brown..' Bay polypore
Sunday, 23 August 2020
'Prickly Wolf's Fart' Fungus; Lycoperdon echinatum or Spiny Puffball
Walking through a bracken maze on the hills above Ullswater, I was relieved to spy a stream and the promise of a way out. The bracken thinned as I approached, and gave way to long grass underneath my feet. Something metallic looking in the grass caught my eye. It looked foreign in the environment, and my first thought, when I clocked it's rounded, slightly flattened shape, was that it was a child's purse that had been dropped. Closer inspection revealed that the coppery-coloured mass was not rigid but soft and easily dented, and the projections that I had taken to be jewels were, infact, spines. When I pressed it, it let out a jet of darkly coloured spores from the underside. I knew what it was; a puffball.
I did not immediately recognise it as a spiny puffball, because as you can see from the photo, most of the spines are missing! However, this is something that happens with age, and this puffball was certainly mature enough to puff.
The genus Lycoperdon means 'Wolf's fart', but I can't attest to it's smell, or that of a wolf's to be fair! Echinatum means prickly in Latin. Maybe it does resemble a sea-urchin when it is younger and covered in spines. It tends to grow in alkaline conditions and beech woods, and is a rare find in the UK!
Sunday, 2 August 2020
Dragonfly nymph skin (Exuvia)
Damselfly and dragonfly start life in the water and grow through a large number of nymph stages. Depending on the species, and also environmental factors such as the temperature, they can stay up to four years in the water! Imagine my surprise when I was clearing out the blanket weed and came across this: