#005: Xylaria polymorpha, Dead Man’s Fingers [Archived]
Note: this is an archived post. You can read the updated version here. October is Creepy Fungus Month on Fungus Fact Friday! To start this month I have chosen to highlight Xylaria polymorpha–Dead Man’s Fingers. When you look at this fungus’ fruiting bodies in the summer or fall it is easy to see how it got its common name. The mushrooms are more or less straight, though often bent or warped. Their exterior is black, wrinkled, and bumpy and becomes cracked with age. The individual mushrooms often grow close together and may become fused at the bottom, forming a “hand” with several “fingers.” X. polymorpha is a wood decomposer, but can often appear to grow from the ground when decomposing buried wood. Thus, this mushroom often resembles a burnt, dead hand reaching out of the ground to grab unwitting passers-by and drag them down into the depths of the earth. ...