*** Welcome to piglix ***

Sclerodermatopsis

Xylaria
Xylaria hypoxylon.jpg
Xylaria hypoxylon
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Sordariomycetes
Order: Xylariales
Family: Xylariaceae
Genus: Xylaria
Hill ex Schrank (1789)
Type species
Xylaria hypoxylon
(L.) Grev. (1824)
Species

See text


See text

Xylaria is a genus of ascomycetous fungi commonly found growing on dead wood. The name comes from the Greek xýlon meaning wood (see xylem).

Two of the common species of the genus are Xylaria hypoxylon and Xylaria polymorpha.

Xylaria hypoxylon, known by the common names stag's horn and candle-snuff fungus, is the most conspicuous because of its erect, 3–7 cm tall, antler-like ascocarps (fruitbodies) which are black at the base (where the perithecia are embedded) but white and branched towards the top, where the fruiting bodies produce white conidia (asexual spores).

Xylaria polymorpha, dead man's fingers, often grows in finger-like clusters from the base of a tree or from wood just below ground level. This is a primary fungus utilized in the spalting of sugar maple and other hardwoods.

Xylaria longipes, known by the common names dead moll's fingers and pénis de bois mort, allegedly improves the quality of the wood used in string instruments. It has not been linked to spalting of maple.

X. hypoxylon

X. polymorpha

X. polymorpha illustrating the range of shapes of fruiting bodies.

A longitudinally split fruiting body of X. polymorpha, showing the many perithecia that lie just beneath the black outer .

X. polymorpha in early July


...
Wikipedia

...