Clubs/stalks on soil


 

The genera Clavaria, Clavulina, Clavulinopsis and Ramariopsis contain species with fleshy fruitbodies up to 10 centimetres long and half a centimetre thick. Common colours are white, yellow, orange and red. The fruitbodies may grow sparsely, gregariously (but clearly as distinct fruitbodies) or in a dense cluster (and it would be easy to mistake such a cluster of separate fruitbodies for a single, branched fruitbody – until you look closely). As a group these fungi are common and easily seen, given the sizes and colours. Some species are recognizable visually but others demand a microscopic study to be sure of an identification.

 

Geoglossum fruitbodies (known as Earth tongues) are fleshy, black, with a broader apex and may grow to several centimetres tall.

 

Warning

If the fruitbody is black and stiff look for Xylaria in the On wood sub-group (https://canberra.naturemapr.org/Community/Categories/Guide/1730). Species of Xylaria are mostly found obviously on wood but sometimes you find them growing from buried wood.

 


Clubs/stalks on soil

Announcements

24 Jun 2025

Hi All,Today we rolled out a number of improvements to our quick search and taxonomy search tools.Exact match results will now appear at the top of search results. E.g. search for "Emu"Improved handli...


Continue reading

NatureMapr 2025 partner update presented to Commonwealth DCCEEW

New feature: special fields for collections

Temporary disruption to attributes

New feature: duplicate a sighting

Discussion

Heinol wrote:
25 Jun 2025
Based on a photo alone I can't go past genus.

Trichoglossum sp.
Teresa wrote:
17 May 2025
Clavulinopsis fusiformis

Clavulinopsis amoena
Teresa wrote:
10 May 2025
Must agree with you, lovely shot

Trichoglossum sp.
Teresa wrote:
25 Jul 2024
Agreed
Not unlike Clavaria redoleoalii at first glance - note difference in stem

Clavaria fragilis group
Heino1 wrote:
25 Jul 2024
Coud also be a Geoglossum

Trichoglossum hirsutum
827,647 sightings of 22,685 species from 14,283 members
CCA 3.0 | privacy
NatureMapr is developed by at3am IT Pty Ltd and is proudly Australian made