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bracket fungus
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bracket fungus

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This varicoloured Coriolus versicolor is one of a large number of often unrelated fungi referred to collectively as bracket fungi because they form bracketlike growths on trees and timber. The fruiting body is the only part that is immediately visible. The mass of hyphae, which form its mycelium, penetrates and feeds upon the dead wood on which the fungus is living. The spore-producing fruiting body is derived from the mycelium.

Any of a group of fungi (see fungus) with fruiting bodies that grow like shelves from the trunks and branches of trees. (Class Basidiomycetes.)



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On this grassy Norman motte, surrounded by a group of tups - rams - is an ancient ash tree: broken and hollow, with huge bracket fungi and peppered with beetle and woodpecker holes; an entire nature reserve and living history in one tree, riddled with ancient ways with a logic of their own.
Fungi, which are found in every ecological niche and are necessary for the recycling of organic building blocks that allow plants and animals to live, include yeasts, molds, and mildews, as well as large mushrooms, puffballs, and bracket fungi that grow on dead trees.
They are known to lay their eggs in bracket fungi, and to enjoy a diet of other beetles.
 
 
 
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