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Black Bulgar
Bulgaria inquinans
51.4427, 6.06087
Field Notes
Description:
Fruiting Body: Cup- or top-shaped at first, becoming flattened or convex; 1-5 cm across; outer surface brown to black, finely to prominently hairy or scaly (often smoother and blacker with age); upper surface black, shiny, and smooth; flesh rubbery to gelatinous; stem absent or merely a pinched-off extension
Habitat:
It grows on branches and bark of dead Oak and Hornbeam. The species can be found from October to March. It can be commonly found on felled trees stored in timber yards
Notes:
Bulgaria inquinans is an odd mushroom, reminiscent of black gumdrops with scaly brown shells--what Uncle Fester would produce if he were CEO of the Gummi factory. Older specimens like the ones illustrated are quite flabby and gelatinous, leading to confusion with jelly fungi, but younger specimens have more of a cup fungus appearance
Ecology: Saprobic on decaying oak and tanoak sticks and logs (also sometimes reported on the wood of birches or elms); growing alone, gregariously, or (more commonly) in clusters; late summer and fall (over winter in warm climates); widely distributed in North America.
Microscopic Features: Spores 9-17 x 6-7 µ; elliptical to somewhat lemon-shaped; smooth. Asci up to about 150 µ long; 8-spored, with the top 4 spores dark brown and uniguttulate in KOH and the bottom 4 spores poorly developed, multiguttulate, and hyaline. Paraphyses filiform. (mushroomexpert: http://www.mushroomexpert.com/bulgaria_inquinans.html )
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