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Fungi
Autumn is a very good
time to see many of the fungi that occur in Great Britain. However, because of
modern farming and forestry practices many of the once common fungi have
undergone a decline mainly due to nitrogen fertilisers on grassland and change
in woodlands and forest practices. Therefore there are only
relatively few places in lowland England were a good variety of fungi can be
found.
The Huntingdon fungi group did an initial survey on the
Wimpole Estate and found Mycenella cooliana a very small fungi. The
rest of the grassland had other species, some very attractive fungi such as the
Field mushrooms and a number of Waxcap species Hygrocbe virgineus, H.
persistens and H. nigrescens
Another good find was the spiny coral fungus Hericium coralloides that
grows on dead ash trees here. This is a rare fungus that belongs to the toothed
fungi group and requires plenty of dead wood standing or fallen. Another rarity
was a very large and impressive fungi called Volvaiella bombycina which
grows on dead elm or in rot holes of dead elm, therefore a species likely to
become rarer unfortunately.
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