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Timber, and Some of its Diseases 1

Abstract

IV. BEFORE proceeding further it will be of advantage to describe another tree-killing fungus, which has long been well known to mycologists as one of the commonest of our toadstools growing from rotten stumps, and decaying wood-work such as old water-pipes, bridges, &c. This is Agaricus melleus (Fig. 15), a tawny yellow toadstool with a ring round its stem, and its gills running down on the stem and bearing white spores, and which springs in tufts from the base of dead and dying trees during September and October. It is very common in this country, and I have often found it on beeches and other trees in Surrey, but it has been regarded as simply springing from the dead rotten wood, &c., at the base of the tree. As a matter of fact, however, this toadstool is traced to a series of dark shining strings, looking almost like the purple-black leaf-stalks of the maidenhair fern, and these strings branch and meander in the wood of the tree, and in the soil, and may attain even great lengths—several feet, for instance. The interest of all this is enhanced when we know that until the last few years these long black cords were supposed to be a peculiar form of fungus, and were known as Rhisomorpha. They are, however, the subterranean vegetative parts (mycelium) of the Agaric we are concerned with, and they can be traced without break of continuity from the base of the toadstool into the soil and tree (Fig. 16). I have several times followed these dark mycelial cords into the timber of old beeches and spruce-fir stumps, but they are also to be found in oaks, plums, various Conifers, and probably may occur in most of our timber-trees if opportunity offers.

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WARD, H. Timber, and Some of its Diseases 1 . Nature 37, 251–254 (1888). https://doi.org/10.1038/037251a0

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