Yellow jelly mushroom on a wooden stick that has become charcoal

in FungiFriday3 years ago

hello friends!! Feeling very lucky to still be given the opportunity to contribute to this community.

At night when I was somewhere I found a pile of wood that had been burned in a wet condition because it had just rained, I haven't seen a single fungus grow on this pile of wood when I haven't explored further, my mind is not sure if it's in the woods. there are no mushrooms growing here when I saw the conditions around and the condition of the wood here, I decided to explore further, it only took 5 minutes I found a very large log that was covered with yellow mushrooms, this looks like a coral reef in in the sea.

This mushroom is very easy to find in the rainy season, this jelly mushroom is one type of mushroom that can be eaten, the height of this mushroom can reach 1.5 cm, the color orange when fresh will turn orange red when it starts to dry, very high growth . quickly become herbs, this mushroom is a fungus that wilts very easily, because this mushroom contains a lot of water in it, this fungus will grow in groups so that this mushroom will spoil our eyes with the yellow color of the group.

Ini adalah kontribusi saya untuk #fungifriday untuk @ewkaw

I would like to thank all the community friends who have given us a place to share our hunting photos here, this is the best place for us who love different types of mushrooms.

CameraPOCO x3 pro
ProcessedSnapseed
Photographer@zulfahmi0221
Author@zulfahmi0221
PlaceForest
LocationNorth Aceh.Indonesia

see you in the next post

🙏

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Very interesting that this fungi popped up out of the charcoal/ wood.
Beautiful. I like the contrast in the photos.

Mushrooms like this very often grow on wood that has been burned

Never saw it myself… on burned wood.
It looks really good with its bright colour on it.

wood like this is very easy to find in a field that has just been cleaned by the owner

Ok, that helps with searching for mushrooms a little.
Around here they make a large pile on the fields and burn it but afterwards it is cleared up again. As it is toooo dry to leave lying around.

maybe oil palm plantations are the solution, because most oil palm farmers, after harvesting the fronds that are cut will be piled somewhere, even though in the pile of palm fronds the fronds are burned the fronds are not completely turned to ashes, there are also very many mushrooms of this type that grow

They would be a solution I think.
But not where I live in southern Spain, it’s more like a tourist destination. So not much plantations of any kind…

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I was about the write the same thing. Coral reef in the sea. That's interesting to hear it was growing off the ashes of the burned logs. They must like that as they're thriving!