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Ice Man Fungus
fomes fomentarius
50.8882, 5.9795
Field Notes
Description:
F. fomentarius has traditionally seen use as the main ingredient of amadou, a material used primarily as tinder, but also used to make clothing and other items. The 5,000-year-old Ötzi the Iceman carried four pieces of F. fomentarius, concluded to be for use as tinder. It also has medicinal and other uses. The species is both a pest and useful in timber production. Fomes fomentarius (commonly known as the Tinder Fungus, Hoof Fungus, Tinder Conk, Tinder Polypore or Ice Man Fungus) is a species of fungal plant pathogen found in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. The species produces very large polypore fruit bodies which are shaped like a horse's hoof and vary in colour from a silvery grey to almost black, though they are normally brown. It grows on the side of various species of tree, which it infects through broken bark, causing rot. The species typically continues to live on trees long after they have died, changing from a parasite to a decomposer.Though inedible
Habitat:
location: North America, Europe
edibility: Inedible
fungus colour: Brown, Grey to beige
normal size: over 15cm
cap type: Other
stem type: Lateral, rudimentary or absent
flesh: Pore material cannot be seperated from flesh of the cap
spore colour: Light to dark brown
habitat: Grows in woods, Grows on wood
Fomes fomentarius (L. ex Fr.) KickxEchter Zunderschwamm Amadouvier, Hoof Fungus or Tinder Bracket. Bracket 5–45cm across, 3–25cm wide, 2–25cm thick, hoof-shaped, hard and woody, usually discrete but several fruit bodies may occur on the same trunk; upper surface with a hard horny crust, concentrically grooved and zoned grey. Flesh hard, fibrous, cinnamon-brown. Taste acrid, smell slightly fruity. Tubes 2–7mm long in each layer, rusty-brown. Pores 2–3 per mm, circular, light grey-brown darkening when handled. Spores brownish, lemon-yellow, oblong-ellipsoid, 15–20 x 5–7um. Hyphal structure trimitic; generative hyphae with clamp-connections. Habitat usually on birch in Scotland and Northern England, but also on beech. The few record from Southern England are mostly on beech and sycamore. Season sporulating in spring to early summer, perennial. Uncommon. Not edible. Distribution, America and Europe.
( http://www.rogersmushrooms.com/gallery/DisplayBlock~bid~5928.asp )
Notes:
==Fomes fomentarius (Tinder conk mushroom, Tsuriganetabe)
-contains compounds with anti-cancer activity.
--This mushroom can be used to treat escherichia coli, pseudomonas aeruginosa. ( http://www.medicalmushrooms.net/fomes-fomentarius/ )
===
Other uses for Fomes fomentarius, as described by Peintner et al. are:
Cauterization substance for wounds (described by Hippocrates in the fifth century BC)
A styptic to stop bleeding-- used by surgeons barbers and dentists (sometimes called the "agaric of the chirurges" or "surgeon's agaric"
Remedy against dysmenorrhea, hemorrhoids, and bladder disorders in Europe
Diuretic, laxatives and nerve tonic in Indic folk medicine
Treating cancers of the esophagus, stomach and uterus in China
Used in smoking rituals in western Sibera and Hokkaido, burning the fruiting bodies overnight to banish evil spirits
Making clothing such as caps and chest protectors (after pounding)
As pincushions to prevent pins and needles from rusting
Used by entomologists to mount their delicate insects
Used in Siberia as snuff or mixed with tobacco
Sold for use in fly fishing as "amadou," which is used to absorb excess water from flies ( http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/dec2001.html )
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