Piptoporus australiensis

Piptoporus australiensis, commonly known as curry punk, is a polyporous bracket fungi. It is found in Australia.[1] Often found on dead eucalypt trees and logs, often favouring fire-damaged wood. Curry Punk is named for its persistent curry smell which develops with age. The white top of this large, thick bracket becomes stained pale cream to orange by the orange flesh. Deep orange-yellow pores exude copious amounts of saffron-yellow juice.[2]

Piptoporus australiensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
P. australiensis
Binomial name
Piptoporus australiensis
(Wakef.) G. Cunn.
Synonyms

Polyporus australiensis Wakef.

Piptoporus australiensis
float
Mycological characteristics
pores on hymenium
ecology is parasitic
edibility: unknown

Description

The Field Guide to Australian Fungi by Bruce A. Fuhrer describes it in this way: "Piptoporus australiensis is usually called Curry Punk because of its persistent curry-like odour, even when old and dry. In contrast to other spongy polypores, this species appears to be immune to insect attack. The large brackets occur on logs, particularly those that have been charred by fire, causing a brown cubical rot."[3]

Cap Diameter to 200 mm, projects to 170 mm; thickness to 80 mm; irregular to semicircular, flat to convex; white then staining yellow, orange to brown; soft but tough, smooth, ridged or pitted, greasy when wet; margin smooth, incurved. Pores are 1–10 per mm; round, angular or irregular; saffron-yellow, ageing to orange, rusty-brown; weeps saffron-yellow juice when wet. No stem, laterally attached to substrate by a broad base. Strong persistent curry smell when old or dry.

gollark: It's one of the things which would need more intrusive tracking.
gollark: No. That would be somewhat difficult to do.
gollark: One achievement can only be gotten by resetting your achievements, because I felt evil or something.
gollark: Anyway, I myself only have 380.29670000000004 achievement points™, because some of them are quite hard and browser horrors mean I occasionally lose my data.
gollark: The comments system has some identifier thing going on for allowing you to edit/delete stuff, and obviously I reserve the right to spy on the logs at any time.

References

  1. "Piptoporus australiensis (Wakef.) G. Cunn. 1965". MycoBank. International Mycological Association. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
  2. Fungimap Australia. Piptoporus australiensis (Pip-toe-poor-uss austrah-lee-en-sis). http://fungimap.org.au/index.php/fduonline-home/136/294/brackets/P-piptoporus-australiensis
  3. Fuhrer B. (1993). A Field Companion to Australian Fungi. Field Naturalists Club of Victoria. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-9598074-7-9.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.