Common name: Aniseed Cockleshell
Scientific name: Lentinellus cochleatus
Introduction: Lentinellus cochleatus is a saprobic fungus that is native to the UK. It is known for giving off an aniseed scent which links to its common name, the Aniseed Cockleshell.
Identification
Cap: The Cap of an Aniseed Cockleshell is shell-shaped or irregularly infundibuliform in shape and varies in colour. They can be anything from a creamy-yellow to a tan-brown.
[The caps of an Aniseed Cockleshell fungus]
Gills: Their gills are very crowded and narrow with toothed edges. They are typically a pinky-white with brown interveins.
Stem: They have a very tough stem that is eccentric and typically begins the same colour as the cap. As the fungus then matures, it turns to an orangey–brown.
Spores: Spores are broadly ellipsoidal and typically are smooth but can sometimes be covered in warts. The spores leave behind a white spore print.
Flesh: Tough and pink in colour.
Habitat and Impact on Trees
The aniseed cockleshell is saprobic and grows on or besides rotting stumps of (typically) broadleaved trees in autumn. They are also often densely clustered and grow alongside woodland footpaths.
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