Turkeytail
The turkeytail is a very colourful bracket fungus that grows throughout the year but is at its best in the autumn Its circular can be seen growing in tiers on trees and dead wood. Cap diameter: 4-10cm
Scientific name:
Trametes versicolour
When to see: January to December
About:
The turkeytail is a small, tough, bracket fungus that grows in tiered layers on dead wood – mainly hardwood, such as beech or oak. It is very common and can be found throughout the UK on rotting stumps and branches. Fungi belong to their own kingdom and get their nutrients and energy from organic matter, rather than photosynthesis like plants. It is often just the fruiting bodies, or ‘mushrooms’, that are visible to us, arising from an unseen network of tiny filaments called ‘hyphae’. These fruiting bodies produce spores for reproduction, although fungi can also reproduce asexually by fragmentation.
How to identify:
The turkeytail is a bracket fungus that forms semi-circular caps around tree trunks. The caps are thin and tough, with very clear, velvety, concentric rings of colour. Colours are variable mixes of brown, yellow, grey, purple, green and black, but the outer margin is always pale – either cream or white. The caps are often layered together, forming tiers.
Did you know?
The turkeytail is a very colourful fungus and was once popular as a table decoration; at one time, it was even used to decorate hats!