Not quite a fungus but a result of one
This is hair ice. It is formed on dead barkless wood and a fungus called Exidiopsis effusa is the main reason. I found this and many more, during late autumn in a forest in Northern Denmark
This is hair ice. It is formed on dead barkless wood and a fungus called Exidiopsis effusa is the main reason. I found this and many more, during late autumn in a forest in Northern Denmark
SnailMagnitude, Nice pic, been a few years since I’ve seen any but always a joy to find ☺️
vinter, Nice to see the real thing! Lots of people recently down south here in the states posting Verbesina and similar “frost flowers” producing plants during the freeze
cosmicrookie, Oh nice! They look funky too!
TheBiscuitLout, Thank you for posting this! I saw several examples of this during the recent freezing weather in the UK, and was confused as to what it was. I don’t recall having seen it before, but then I haven’t lived in a wooded valley during prolonged double-digit negative temperatures before either.
cosmicrookie, You’re welcome!
As far as I know, and I can easily be wrong about this, it mostly forms in snow free weather and when the temperature is just below freezing
TheBiscuitLout, That would correlate to when I saw it. It’s actually pretty hard to photograph when the ground is frosty, as there’s so little contrast
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