This is the 15th year of continuous daily publication for 365Caws. All things considered, it's likely it will be the last year as it is becoming increasingly difficult for me to find interesting material. However, I hope that I may have inspired someone to a greater curiosity about the natural world with my natural history posts, or encouraged a novice weaver or needleworker. If so, I've done what I set out to do.
Showing posts with label Bisporella citrina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bisporella citrina. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
Lemon Discos
Day 5: Having discovered Lemon Discos entirely by accident several years ago, I now make an annual autumn pilgrimage to their log to assure myself that they're doing well. I have never found them in any other location, but the species is purportedly common. The issue with finding them is their size. At most, Bisporella citrina achieves a diameter of 4 mm, and not often that! Compare the grass blade in the upper left corner. These ranged from microscopic to a whopping 2 mm. Observation from the side, if you cared to lay your cheek against wet, rotting hardwood, would show that each disc(o) is supported by a short pseudostipe. Whatever they may lack in size, they make up for it in sheer cuteness, at least in the opinion of this easily entertained naturalist.
Monday, March 2, 2020
Bisporella Citrina
Day 141: Bisporella citrina is a fungus quite common in the Pacific Northwest, but it takes a keen eye to spot it because the discs are seldom more than 3 mm in diameter. Since it grows on hardwood branches which have lost their bark (usually broken and on the ground), visibility may be additionally occluded by an overgrowth of moss or lichen. When the fruiting bodies first emerge, they appear as stalkless, rounded bumps. As they mature, a depression develops in the center of each bump, giving rise to the common name "Yellow Fairy Cups." They are also known by the enchanting name, "Lemon Discos."
Saturday, October 26, 2019
Bisporella Citrina, Lemon Discos
Day 13: Hiking in deciduous forest affords opportunities to find things you wouldn't see among conifers. I can't say what prompted me to stop at this particular point on the trail, but had I not done so I wouldn't have noticed teeny-tiny little orange spots on a piece of decaying wood. Moving in for a closer look, I discovered that they weren't closely attached to the substrate as I had initially thought. Each little disk was supported on a stalk (stipe). The largest cap was no more than 3 mm and a smaller branch to the side was freckled with even more in the 1 mm range. "Cute!" says I, thinking that they probably wouldn't be listed in any of my mushroom/fungus field guides, but they were: Bisporella citrina, commonly called "Yellow Discos." Discos? I thought it was a misprint, the "o" having slipped in with a fumble of fingers. I checked. No, it really is Discos. Alternately, they're called Yellow Fairy Cups. They can be found growing on decaying hardwood which has lost its bark.
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