Fomes fomentarius (L. : Fr.) J.J. Kickx.

Syn: Polyporus fomentarius L. : Fr.                                 Profile Group: Basidiomycota, Polyporales

Macroscopic charactersshapeungulate; sessile
size2–15 cm wide
texturetough to woody, even when fresh
pileussmooth; zonate; hard crust; brownish gray to nearly black
stipeN/A
contextbrown; up to 1 cm thick; yellowish brown granular core
pore surfacebrown to grayish brown; concave
poresround; 4–5 per mm
tube layer(s)stratified; each layer up to 1 cm long
Microscopic charactershyphal systemtrimitic
clamp connectionspresent on generative hyphae, but sparse
sterile elementsnone
basidiosporescylindric; hyaline; smooth; nonamyloid; 12–18 x 4–7 µm
Habitat characterssubstrate/hostliving and dead deciduous trees; common on birch and beech
seasonalityperennial; can be found throughout the year
type of decaywhite mottled heart rot of living trees
rangeNorth Carolina north to SE Canada, transcontinental to the Pacific Northwest, north to Alaska. Southern limit appears to be in the southern Appalachian Mountains in North Carolina and Tennessee.
Compare withFomes fasciatus, a southeastern US species that is applanate, seldom ungulate, with a convex pore surface, and found chiefly on oaks. The ranges of F. fasciatus and F. fomentarius overlap in Tennessee and North Carolina.
ReferencesOverholts, 1953; Gilbertson & Ryvarden, 1986.
Front view of basidiocarp (scale in cm.)
Profile view of basidiocarp
Cut‐away view of basidiocarp
Close‐up of pore surface (small div = 1 mm.)
Hyphae from granular core at 400x
Basidiospores at 400x in KOH solution