Fellinus grape: description and photo

Name:Fellinus grape
Latin name:Phellinus viticola
A type: Inedible
Characteristics:

Group: tinder fungus

Phellinus grape (Phellinus viticola) is a woody fungus of the Basidiomycete class, belonging to the Gimenochetes family and the Fellinus genus. It was first described by Ludwig von Schweinitz, and the fruiting body received its modern classification thanks to the Dutchman Marinus Donck in 1966. Its other scientific names are Polyporus viticola Schwein, since 1828.

Important! Fellinus grape is the cause of the rapid destruction of wood, making it unusable.

What does grape fellinus look like?

The fruit body deprived of its stalk is attached to the substrate by the lateral part of the cap. The shape is narrow, elongated, slightly wavy, irregularly broken, up to 5-7 cm wide and 0.8-1.8 cm thick. In young mushrooms, the surface is covered with short hairs, velvety to the touch. As it develops, the cap loses its pubescence, becomes rough, uneven-bumpy, varnish-shiny, like dark amber or honey. The color is reddish-brown, brick, chocolate. The edge is bright orange or buffy, fleecy, rounded.

The pulp is dense, not more than 0.5 cm in thickness, porous-tough, woody, chestnut or yellowish-red in color. The hymenophore is lighter, fine-pored, beige, coffee-milk or brownish. Irregular, with angular pores, often descends along the surface of the tree, occupying a significant area. The tubes reach a thickness of 1 cm.

Porous hymenophore covered with a white downy coating

Where grape fellinus grows

Fellinus grape is a cosmopolitan mushroom and is found everywhere in the northern and temperate latitudes. Grows in the Urals and in the Siberian taiga, in the Leningrad region and the Far East. Inhabits dead wood and fallen spruce trunks. Sometimes it can be seen on other conifers: pine, fir, cedar.

Comment! The fungus is perennial, therefore it is available for observation at any time of the year. For the development of it, small above-zero temperatures and nutrition from the carrier tree are enough.

Separate fruiting bodies are able to grow together into single large organisms

Is it possible to eat grape fellinus

Fruit bodies are classified as inedible. Their pulp is corky, tasteless and bitter. Nutritional value tends to zero. Studies on the content of toxic substances have not been carried out.

Small mushroom buttons grow very quickly on the surface of the tree into bizarrely curved ribbons and spots

Conclusion

Fellinus grape is widespread in Russia, Europe, and North America. Inhabits coniferous or mixed forests. It settles on dead wood of pine, spruce, fir, cedar, quickly destroying it. It is a perennial, so you can see it in any season. Inedible, no publicly available toxicity data.

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