Video: Fruiting bodies in park tree

Colin

Administrator
Administrator
Well, I frequent this park and check things out a bit and it's been a few months since I was there last.

I noticed from a distance that a tree canopy was quite bare so I checked it out.

I've forwrded the link and news to the council (good samaritan) so they can get onto it.

1.49mins and 7.60MB in streaming wmv format.

http://www.palmtreeservices.com.au/video/nfp.wmv

What type of fungus do you think it is?
 
And a triple stacked pic of another I drove by today.

What type is it you reckon?

And have a look at the middle pic to see probable cause.
 

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We have dead trees standing on city streets in the nearby small town. They don't have a city arborist so they probably don't know that all trees have leaves in the summer.

That second fungus looks like footalaria to me.
 
[ QUOTE ]
Where were the Foams? I could'nt see any foams in that vid at all /forum/images/graemlins/confused.gif

[/ QUOTE ]

In the states Mr. Ed was a talking horse. In the U.K. evidently it's the other end that does the talking. /forum/images/graemlins/grin.gif
 
[ QUOTE ]
Where were the Foams? I could'nt see any foams in that vid at all /forum/images/graemlins/confused.gif

[/ QUOTE ]

What on earth are you on about Mr Ed? What are foams?
 
Oh Tomsk

In the video's menu's you'll see some I've made where I use foams to prevent damage to stuff. Ed's just mucking around ... /forum/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
[ QUOTE ]
whats footalaria? never come across that one in any of my books

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Armillaria. I didn't want to give out an answer before others had a chance to answer.
 
Locally we have a high dollar outfit telling a high dollar condo area they have Ganoderma in this beautiful, massive LiveOak that i see no signs of fruiting bodues on, and one small decay port at ground. The tree service also claims that more oaks need removed, for the Ganoderma is contaigeous.

i thought that was ony true in our local palms, can't plant in same hole etc.; but not contageous in oaks??
 
i looked through my books and couldnt see any decent pics of the various species of armillaria. its cerainly not the honey fungus thats so common in this country. id agree with some sort of ganoderma
 

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