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Fomes fomentarius

Fomes fomentarius (commonly known as the tinder fungus,[3] false tinder fungus, hoof fungus,[3] tinder conk, tinder polypore or ice man fungus) is a species of fungal plant pathogen found in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. The species produces very large polypore fruit bodies which are shaped like a horse's hoof and vary in colour from a silvery grey to almost black, though they are normally brown. It grows on the side of various species of tree, which it infects through broken bark, causing rot. The species typically continues to live on trees long after they have died, changing from a parasite to a decomposer.

Fomes fomentarius
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Basidiomycota
Class: Agaricomycetes
Order: Polyporales
Family: Polyporaceae
Genus: Fomes
Species:
F. fomentarius
Binomial name
Fomes fomentarius
(L.) Fr. 1849
Synonyms
Species synonymy[1][2]
  • 1753 Boletus fomentarius L.
  • 1783 Agaricus fomentarius (L.) Lam.
  • 1789 Boletus ungulatus Bull.
  • 1818 Polyporus fomentarius (L.) G. Mey.
  • 1839 Polyporus fomentarius var. excavatus Berk.
  • 1861 Polyporus inzengae Ces. & De Not.
  • 1877 Polyporus mirus Kalchbr.
  • 1882 Fomes mirus (Kalchbr.) P. Karst.
  • 1884 Polyporus introstuppeus Berk. & Cooke
  • 1885 Fomes excavatus (Berk.) Cooke
  • 1885 Fomes introstuppeus (Berk. & Cooke) Cooke
  • 1885 Fomes inzengae (Ces. & De Not.) Cooke
  • 1886 Placodes fomentarius (L.) Quél.
  • 1888 Ochroporus fomentarius (L.) J. Schröt.
  • 1898 Scindalma fomentarium (L.) Kuntze
  • 1898 Scindalma introstuppeum (Berk. & Cooke) Kuntze
  • 1898 Scindalma mirum (Kalchbr.) Kuntze
  • 1900 Ungulina fomentaria (L.) Pat.
  • 1903 Elfvingia fomentaria (L.) Murrill
  • 1914 Elfvingiella fomentaria (L.) Murrill
  • 1915 Fomes nigrescens Lloyd
  • 1916 Fomes griseus Lázaro Ibiza
  • 1916 Ungularia populina Lázaro Ibiza
  • 1917 Ungularia albescens Lázaro Ibiza
  • 1917 Ungularia nivea Lázaro Ibiza
  • 1917 Ungularia subzonata Lázaro Ibiza
  • 1922 Polyporus fomentarius var. lineatus Velen.
  • 1925 Fomes albescens (Lázaro Ibiza) Sacc. & Trotter
  • 1925 Fomes niveus (Lázaro Ibiza) Sacc. & Trotter
  • 1925 Polyporus populinus (Lázaro Ibiza) Sacc. & Trotter
  • 1925 Fomes subzonatus Lázaro Ibiza) Sacc. & Trotter
  • 1963 Pyropolyporus fomentarius (L.) Teng

Though inedible, F. fomentarius has traditionally seen use as the main ingredient of amadou, a material used primarily as tinder, but also used to make clothing and other items. The 5,000-year-old Ötzi the Iceman carried four pieces of F. fomentarius, concluded to be for use as tinder. It also has medicinal and other uses.

Taxonomy edit

The first scientific description of the fungus appeared in the literature in the 1753 Species Plantarum by Carl Linnaeus; he called it Boletus fomentarius.[4] The specific epithet fomentarius is from the Latin fomentum, referring to tinder.[5] The species has been described as a member of numerous different genera. In 1783, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck named the species Agaricus fomentarius in his Encyclopédie Méthodique: Botanique.[6] In 1818, Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Meyer described Polyporus fomentarius in his Primitiae Florae Essequeboensis,[7] and this name was sanctioned by Elias Magnus Fries in the 1821 publication of the first volume of his Systema Mycologicum.[2] Fries later, in his 1849 Summa vegetabilium Scandinaviae, moved the species to the genus Fomes. Subsequent attempts to change the genus of the species have been unsuccessful; the species was named Placodes fomentarius by Lucien Quélet in 1886, Ochroporus fomentarius by Joseph Schröter in 1888 and Scindalma fomentarium by Otto Kuntze in 1898. In the twentieth century, Narcisse Théophile Patouillard named the species Ungulina fomentaria in 1900, and William Murrill twice reallocated the species; in 1903, he named it Elfvingia fomentaria and in 1914, he named it Elfvingiella fomentaria. In 1963, Shu Chün Teng named it Pyropolyporus fomentarius. These names are considered obligate synonyms; that is, different names for the same species based on a single description or specimen. In addition to the obligate synonyms, there are a number of taxonomic synonyms, whereby names have been described as separate species, but have come to be considered synonymous.[2] The species is commonly known as the tinder fungus, hoof fungus,[3] tinder polypore, ice man fungus[8] or false tinder fungus.[9]

Description edit

 
F. fomentarius can vary in colour from a very light grey to almost black.

Fomes fomentarius has a fruit body of between 5 and 45 centimetres (2.0 and 17.7 in) across, 3 and 25 cm (1.2 and 9.8 in) wide and 2 and 25 cm (0.8 and 9.8 in) thick,[3] which attaches broadly to the tree on which the fungus is growing.[10] While typically shaped like a horse's hoof, it can also be more bracket-like with an umbonate attachment to the substrate.[10] The species typically has broad, concentric ridges, with a blunt and rounded margin.[10] The flesh is hard and fibrous, and a cinnamon brown colour.[3] The upper surface is tough, bumpy,[10] hard and woody,[3] varying in colour, usually a light brown or grey. The margin is whitish during periods of growth.[10] The hard crust is from 1 to 2 mm (0.04 to 0.08 in) thick, and covers the tough flesh.[11] The underside has round pores of a cream colour when new, maturing to brown,[10] though they darken when handled.[3] The pores are circular, and there are 2–3 per millimetre. The tubes are 2 to 7 mm (0.08 to 0.28 in) long and a rusty brown colour.[3]

The colouration and size of the fruit body can vary based on where the specimen has grown. Silvery-white, greyish and nearly black specimens have been known. The darkest fruit bodies were previously classified as Fomes nigricans, but this is now recognised as a synonym of Fomes fomentarius. The colour is typically lighter at lower latitudes and altitudes, as well as on fruit bodies in the Northern Hemisphere that grow on the south side of trees. However, studies have concluded that there is no reliable way to differentiate varieties; instead, the phenotypic differences can "be attributed either to different ecotypes or to interactions between the genotype and its environment".[12]

Microscopic features edit

 
Fomitopsis pinicola is a lookalike species.

The spores are lemon-yellow in colour, and oblong-ellipsoid in shape. They measure 15–20 by 5–7 μm. The species has a trimitic hyphal structure (meaning that it has generative, skeletal and binding hyphae), with generative hyphae (hyphae that are relatively undifferentiated and can develop reproductive structures) with clamp connections.[3]

Similar species edit

Fomes fomentarius can easily be confused with Phellinus igniarius, species from the genus Ganoderma and Fomitopsis pinicola. An easy way to differentiate F. fomentarius is by adding a drop of potassium hydroxide onto a small piece of the fruit body from the upper surface. The solution will turn a dark blood red if the specimen is F. fomentarius, due to the presence of the chemical fomentariol.[13]

Habitat and distribution edit

Fomes fomentarius has a circumboreal distribution, being found in both northern and southern Africa, throughout Asia and into eastern North America,[14] and throughout Europe,[12] and is frequently encountered.[15] The optimal temperature for the species's growth is between 27 and 30 °C (81 and 86 °F) and the maximum is between 34 and 38 °C (93 and 100 °F).[16] F. fomentarius typically grows alone, but multiple fruit bodies can sometimes be found upon the same host trunk.[3] The species most typically grows upon hardwoods. In northern areas, it is most common on birch, while, in the south, beech is more typical.[14] In the Mediterranean, oak is the typical host.[12] The species has also been known to grow upon maple,[12] cherry, hickory,[8] lime tree, poplar, willow, alder, hornbeam,[14] sycamore,[3] and even, exceptionally, softwoods,[14] such as conifers.[12]

Ecology edit

 
Though initially parasitic, F. fomentarius continues to grow upon fallen trees.

Fomes fomentarius is a stem decay plant pathogen. The species' mycelium penetrates the wood of trees through damaged bark or broken branches, causing rot in the host.[13] It can grow on the bark wound, or even directly onto the bark of older or dead trees.[11] The decayed wood shows black lines in the lightly coloured decayed areas; these are known as pseudosclerotic layers or demarcation lines.[13] The lines are caused by enzymes called phenoloxidases, converting either fungus or plant matter into melanin. The lines are not an absolute identifier, as they can also occur in plants infected by Kretzschmaria deusta and some Armillaria species.[13] Despite beginning as a parasite, the species is able to survive for a time (hastening decomposition) on fallen or felled trees as a saprotrophic feeder,[17] and typically lives there for years, until the log is completely destroyed.[18] It is also capable of colonising and breaking down pollen grains, giving it a second food source which is particular high in nitrogen.[13] Infected trees become very brittle,[19] and cracks can occur in the affected tree due to wind. F. fomentarius is particularly adept at moving between cracks on the tree without interruption.[18] However, in addition to the obviously infected damaged trees, F. fomentarius is known to be an endophyte, meaning that healthy trees which are not sporting F. fomentarius fruit bodies could still be infected.[8]

The fruit bodies are perennial, surviving for up to thirty years. The strongest growth period is between early summer and autumn.[14] The yearly growth always occurs on the bottom of the fungus, meaning that the lowest layer is the youngest. This occurs even if the host tree has been laid on the forest floor,[20] which can happen because of the white rot induced by the fungus. This is a process known as positive gravitropism.[21] Very large numbers of spores are produced, particularly in spring, with up to 887 million basidiospores an hour being produced by some fruit bodies. Spore production also takes place in autumn, though not nearly as heavily.[12] The spores are released at comparatively low temperatures.[22] In dry weather, the spores are visible as a white powder.[11]

Uses and importance edit

 
A cap made from amadou

The species is not considered edible;[3][10] the flesh has an acrid taste, with a slightly fruity smell.[3] The fungus has economic significance; it depreciates timber value as the parasitic infection advances.[23] Fomes fomentarius infects trees through damaged bark.[11]

Amadou edit

This species, as well as others such as Phellinus igniarius, can be used to make amadou, a material used as tinder,[24] among other purposes. Amadou is produced from the flesh of the fungus fruit bodies.[14] The young fruit bodies are soaked in water before being cut into strips, and are then beaten and stretched, separating the fibres. The resulting material is referred to as "red amadou".[24] The addition of gunpowder or nitre produces an even more potent tinder.[14][24] The flesh has further been used to produce clothing, including caps, gloves and breeches.[13] Amadou was used medicinally by dentists, who used it to dry teeth, and surgeons, who used it as a styptic. It is still used today in fly fishing for drying flies.[25] Other items of clothing and even picture frames and ornaments have been known to be made from the fungus in Europe, particularly Bohemia.[26] The fungus is known to have been used as a firestarter in Hedeby,[14] and it is known that the fungus was used as early as 3000 BCE. When found, the 5,000-year-old Ötzi the Iceman was carrying four pieces of F. fomentarius fruit body.[27] Chemical tests led to the conclusion that he carried it for use as tinder.[28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Fomes fomentarius (L.) J. Kickx f." Species Fungorum. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
  2. ^ a b c "Fomes fomentarius (L.) Fr. 1849". MycoBank. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Phillips, Roger (1981). Mushrooms and Other Fungi of Great Britain and Europe. London: Pan Books. p. 262. ISBN 0-330-26441-9.
  4. ^ Linnaeus C. (1753). Species Plantarum (in Latin). Vol. 2. Stockholm: Impensis Laurentii Salvii. p. 1176. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
  5. ^ Rea, Carleton (1922). British Basidiomycetaceae: a Handbook to the Larger British Fungi. Cambridge University Press. p. 592.
  6. ^ "Agaricus fomentarius (L.) Lam. 1783". MycoBank. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  7. ^ "Polyporus fomentarius (L.) G. Mey. 1818". MycoBank. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  8. ^ a b c Stamets 2005, p. 31
  9. ^ Kirtley, Paul (2011). "The easy way to use Fomes fomentarius as tinder". PaulKirtley.co.uk. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Sterry, Paul; Hughes, Barry (2009). Complete Guide to British Mushrooms & Toadstools. HarperCollins. p. 256. ISBN 978-0-00-723224-6.
  11. ^ a b c d Butin, Heinz; Lonsdale, D. (1995). Tree Diseases and Disorders. Oxford University Press. pp. 167–8. ISBN 978-0-19-854932-1.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Schwarze 2000, p. 59
  13. ^ a b c d e f Schwarze 2000, p. 61
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Schmidt 2006, p. 195
  15. ^ Kibby, Geoffrey (2003). Mushrooms and Toadstools of Britain and Northern Europe. Hamlyn. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-7537-1865-0.
  16. ^ Schmidt 2006, p. 68
  17. ^ Schmidt 2006, p. 200
  18. ^ a b Schwarze 2000, p. 62
  19. ^ Schwarze 2000, p. 26
  20. ^ Schmidt 2006, p. 25
  21. ^ Schmidt 2006, p. 75
  22. ^ Schwarze 2000, p. 40
  23. ^ McCormick, Meghan A.; Grand, Larry F.; Post, Justin B.; Cubeta, Marc A. (2013). "Characterization of species of Fomes Phylogenetic and phenotypic characterization of Fomes fasciatus and Fomes fomentarius in the United States". Mycologia. 105 (6): 1524–1534. doi:10.3852/12-336. PMID 23928420. S2CID 20858783 – via Taylor & Francis Online.
  24. ^ a b c Harding 2008, pp. 159–60
  25. ^ Harding 2008, p. 159
  26. ^ Rolfe, Robert Thatcher; Rolfe, F. W. (1974). The Romance of the Fungus World. Courier Dover. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-486-23105-1.
  27. ^ Harding 2008, p. 157
  28. ^ Spindler, Konrad (1995). Der Mann im Eis [The man in ice]. Springer. p. 75. ISBN 978-3-211-82626-3.

Cited texts edit

External links edit

fomes, fomentarius, commonly, known, tinder, fungus, false, tinder, fungus, hoof, fungus, tinder, conk, tinder, polypore, fungus, species, fungal, plant, pathogen, found, europe, asia, africa, north, america, species, produces, very, large, polypore, fruit, bo. Fomes fomentarius commonly known as the tinder fungus 3 false tinder fungus hoof fungus 3 tinder conk tinder polypore or ice man fungus is a species of fungal plant pathogen found in Europe Asia Africa and North America The species produces very large polypore fruit bodies which are shaped like a horse s hoof and vary in colour from a silvery grey to almost black though they are normally brown It grows on the side of various species of tree which it infects through broken bark causing rot The species typically continues to live on trees long after they have died changing from a parasite to a decomposer Fomes fomentariusScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom FungiDivision BasidiomycotaClass AgaricomycetesOrder PolyporalesFamily PolyporaceaeGenus FomesSpecies F fomentariusBinomial nameFomes fomentarius L Fr 1849SynonymsSpecies synonymy 1 2 1753 Boletus fomentarius L 1783 Agaricus fomentarius L Lam 1789 Boletus ungulatus Bull 1818 Polyporus fomentarius L G Mey 1839 Polyporus fomentarius var excavatus Berk 1861 Polyporus inzengae Ces amp De Not 1877 Polyporus mirus Kalchbr 1882 Fomes mirus Kalchbr P Karst 1884 Polyporus introstuppeus Berk amp Cooke1885 Fomes excavatus Berk Cooke1885 Fomes introstuppeus Berk amp Cooke Cooke1885 Fomes inzengae Ces amp De Not Cooke1886 Placodes fomentarius L Quel 1888 Ochroporus fomentarius L J Schrot 1898 Scindalma fomentarium L Kuntze1898 Scindalma introstuppeum Berk amp Cooke Kuntze1898 Scindalma mirum Kalchbr Kuntze1900 Ungulina fomentaria L Pat 1903 Elfvingia fomentaria L Murrill1914 Elfvingiella fomentaria L Murrill1915 Fomes nigrescens Lloyd1916 Fomes griseus Lazaro Ibiza1916 Ungularia populina Lazaro Ibiza1917 Ungularia albescens Lazaro Ibiza1917 Ungularia nivea Lazaro Ibiza1917 Ungularia subzonata Lazaro Ibiza1922 Polyporus fomentarius var lineatus Velen 1925 Fomes albescens Lazaro Ibiza Sacc amp Trotter1925 Fomes niveus Lazaro Ibiza Sacc amp Trotter1925 Polyporus populinus Lazaro Ibiza Sacc amp Trotter1925 Fomes subzonatus Lazaro Ibiza Sacc amp Trotter1963 Pyropolyporus fomentarius L TengThough inedible F fomentarius has traditionally seen use as the main ingredient of amadou a material used primarily as tinder but also used to make clothing and other items The 5 000 year old Otzi the Iceman carried four pieces of F fomentarius concluded to be for use as tinder It also has medicinal and other uses Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Microscopic features 2 2 Similar species 3 Habitat and distribution 4 Ecology 5 Uses and importance 5 1 Amadou 6 See also 7 References 8 Cited texts 9 External linksTaxonomy editThe first scientific description of the fungus appeared in the literature in the 1753 Species Plantarum by Carl Linnaeus he called it Boletus fomentarius 4 The specific epithet fomentarius is from the Latin fomentum referring to tinder 5 The species has been described as a member of numerous different genera In 1783 Jean Baptiste Lamarck named the species Agaricus fomentarius in his Encyclopedie Methodique Botanique 6 In 1818 Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Meyer described Polyporus fomentarius in his Primitiae Florae Essequeboensis 7 and this name was sanctioned by Elias Magnus Fries in the 1821 publication of the first volume of his Systema Mycologicum 2 Fries later in his 1849 Summa vegetabilium Scandinaviae moved the species to the genus Fomes Subsequent attempts to change the genus of the species have been unsuccessful the species was named Placodes fomentarius by Lucien Quelet in 1886 Ochroporus fomentarius by Joseph Schroter in 1888 and Scindalma fomentarium by Otto Kuntze in 1898 In the twentieth century Narcisse Theophile Patouillard named the species Ungulina fomentaria in 1900 and William Murrill twice reallocated the species in 1903 he named it Elfvingia fomentaria and in 1914 he named it Elfvingiella fomentaria In 1963 Shu Chun Teng named it Pyropolyporus fomentarius These names are considered obligate synonyms that is different names for the same species based on a single description or specimen In addition to the obligate synonyms there are a number of taxonomic synonyms whereby names have been described as separate species but have come to be considered synonymous 2 The species is commonly known as the tinder fungus hoof fungus 3 tinder polypore ice man fungus 8 or false tinder fungus 9 Description edit nbsp F fomentarius can vary in colour from a very light grey to almost black Fomes fomentarius has a fruit body of between 5 and 45 centimetres 2 0 and 17 7 in across 3 and 25 cm 1 2 and 9 8 in wide and 2 and 25 cm 0 8 and 9 8 in thick 3 which attaches broadly to the tree on which the fungus is growing 10 While typically shaped like a horse s hoof it can also be more bracket like with an umbonate attachment to the substrate 10 The species typically has broad concentric ridges with a blunt and rounded margin 10 The flesh is hard and fibrous and a cinnamon brown colour 3 The upper surface is tough bumpy 10 hard and woody 3 varying in colour usually a light brown or grey The margin is whitish during periods of growth 10 The hard crust is from 1 to 2 mm 0 04 to 0 08 in thick and covers the tough flesh 11 The underside has round pores of a cream colour when new maturing to brown 10 though they darken when handled 3 The pores are circular and there are 2 3 per millimetre The tubes are 2 to 7 mm 0 08 to 0 28 in long and a rusty brown colour 3 The colouration and size of the fruit body can vary based on where the specimen has grown Silvery white greyish and nearly black specimens have been known The darkest fruit bodies were previously classified as Fomes nigricans but this is now recognised as a synonym of Fomes fomentarius The colour is typically lighter at lower latitudes and altitudes as well as on fruit bodies in the Northern Hemisphere that grow on the south side of trees However studies have concluded that there is no reliable way to differentiate varieties instead the phenotypic differences can be attributed either to different ecotypes or to interactions between the genotype and its environment 12 Microscopic features edit nbsp Fomitopsis pinicola is a lookalike species The spores are lemon yellow in colour and oblong ellipsoid in shape They measure 15 20 by 5 7 mm The species has a trimitic hyphal structure meaning that it has generative skeletal and binding hyphae with generative hyphae hyphae that are relatively undifferentiated and can develop reproductive structures with clamp connections 3 Similar species edit Fomes fomentarius can easily be confused with Phellinus igniarius species from the genus Ganoderma and Fomitopsis pinicola An easy way to differentiate F fomentarius is by adding a drop of potassium hydroxide onto a small piece of the fruit body from the upper surface The solution will turn a dark blood red if the specimen is F fomentarius due to the presence of the chemical fomentariol 13 Habitat and distribution editFomes fomentarius has a circumboreal distribution being found in both northern and southern Africa throughout Asia and into eastern North America 14 and throughout Europe 12 and is frequently encountered 15 The optimal temperature for the species s growth is between 27 and 30 C 81 and 86 F and the maximum is between 34 and 38 C 93 and 100 F 16 F fomentarius typically grows alone but multiple fruit bodies can sometimes be found upon the same host trunk 3 The species most typically grows upon hardwoods In northern areas it is most common on birch while in the south beech is more typical 14 In the Mediterranean oak is the typical host 12 The species has also been known to grow upon maple 12 cherry hickory 8 lime tree poplar willow alder hornbeam 14 sycamore 3 and even exceptionally softwoods 14 such as conifers 12 Ecology edit nbsp Though initially parasitic F fomentarius continues to grow upon fallen trees Fomes fomentarius is a stem decay plant pathogen The species mycelium penetrates the wood of trees through damaged bark or broken branches causing rot in the host 13 It can grow on the bark wound or even directly onto the bark of older or dead trees 11 The decayed wood shows black lines in the lightly coloured decayed areas these are known as pseudosclerotic layers or demarcation lines 13 The lines are caused by enzymes called phenoloxidases converting either fungus or plant matter into melanin The lines are not an absolute identifier as they can also occur in plants infected by Kretzschmaria deusta and some Armillaria species 13 Despite beginning as a parasite the species is able to survive for a time hastening decomposition on fallen or felled trees as a saprotrophic feeder 17 and typically lives there for years until the log is completely destroyed 18 It is also capable of colonising and breaking down pollen grains giving it a second food source which is particular high in nitrogen 13 Infected trees become very brittle 19 and cracks can occur in the affected tree due to wind F fomentarius is particularly adept at moving between cracks on the tree without interruption 18 However in addition to the obviously infected damaged trees F fomentarius is known to be an endophyte meaning that healthy trees which are not sporting F fomentarius fruit bodies could still be infected 8 The fruit bodies are perennial surviving for up to thirty years The strongest growth period is between early summer and autumn 14 The yearly growth always occurs on the bottom of the fungus meaning that the lowest layer is the youngest This occurs even if the host tree has been laid on the forest floor 20 which can happen because of the white rot induced by the fungus This is a process known as positive gravitropism 21 Very large numbers of spores are produced particularly in spring with up to 887 million basidiospores an hour being produced by some fruit bodies Spore production also takes place in autumn though not nearly as heavily 12 The spores are released at comparatively low temperatures 22 In dry weather the spores are visible as a white powder 11 Uses and importance edit nbsp A cap made from amadouThe species is not considered edible 3 10 the flesh has an acrid taste with a slightly fruity smell 3 The fungus has economic significance it depreciates timber value as the parasitic infection advances 23 Fomes fomentarius infects trees through damaged bark 11 Amadou edit Main article Amadou This species as well as others such as Phellinus igniarius can be used to make amadou a material used as tinder 24 among other purposes Amadou is produced from the flesh of the fungus fruit bodies 14 The young fruit bodies are soaked in water before being cut into strips and are then beaten and stretched separating the fibres The resulting material is referred to as red amadou 24 The addition of gunpowder or nitre produces an even more potent tinder 14 24 The flesh has further been used to produce clothing including caps gloves and breeches 13 Amadou was used medicinally by dentists who used it to dry teeth and surgeons who used it as a styptic It is still used today in fly fishing for drying flies 25 Other items of clothing and even picture frames and ornaments have been known to be made from the fungus in Europe particularly Bohemia 26 The fungus is known to have been used as a firestarter in Hedeby 14 and it is known that the fungus was used as early as 3000 BCE When found the 5 000 year old Otzi the Iceman was carrying four pieces of F fomentarius fruit body 27 Chemical tests led to the conclusion that he carried it for use as tinder 28 See also editPiptoporus betulinusalso carried by Otzi Forest pathology Ganoderma applanatum known as the artist s conkReferences edit Fomes fomentarius L J Kickx f Species Fungorum Retrieved 2010 09 16 a b c Fomes fomentarius L Fr 1849 MycoBank Retrieved 2 January 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Phillips Roger 1981 Mushrooms and Other Fungi of Great Britain and Europe London Pan Books p 262 ISBN 0 330 26441 9 Linnaeus C 1753 Species Plantarum in Latin Vol 2 Stockholm Impensis Laurentii Salvii p 1176 Retrieved 2010 09 16 Rea Carleton 1922 British Basidiomycetaceae a Handbook to the Larger British Fungi Cambridge University Press p 592 Agaricus fomentarius L Lam 1783 MycoBank Retrieved 2 January 2010 Polyporus fomentarius L G Mey 1818 MycoBank Retrieved 2 January 2010 a b c Stamets 2005 p 31 Kirtley Paul 2011 The easy way to use Fomes fomentarius as tinder PaulKirtley co uk Retrieved 13 July 2014 a b c d e f g Sterry Paul Hughes Barry 2009 Complete Guide to British Mushrooms amp Toadstools HarperCollins p 256 ISBN 978 0 00 723224 6 a b c d Butin Heinz Lonsdale D 1995 Tree Diseases and Disorders Oxford University Press pp 167 8 ISBN 978 0 19 854932 1 a b c d e f Schwarze 2000 p 59 a b c d e f Schwarze 2000 p 61 a b c d e f g h Schmidt 2006 p 195 Kibby Geoffrey 2003 Mushrooms and Toadstools of Britain and Northern Europe Hamlyn p 213 ISBN 978 0 7537 1865 0 Schmidt 2006 p 68 Schmidt 2006 p 200 a b Schwarze 2000 p 62 Schwarze 2000 p 26 Schmidt 2006 p 25 Schmidt 2006 p 75 Schwarze 2000 p 40 McCormick Meghan A Grand Larry F Post Justin B Cubeta Marc A 2013 Characterization of species of Fomes Phylogenetic and phenotypic characterization of Fomes fasciatus and Fomes fomentarius in the United States Mycologia 105 6 1524 1534 doi 10 3852 12 336 PMID 23928420 S2CID 20858783 via Taylor amp Francis Online a b c Harding 2008 pp 159 60 Harding 2008 p 159 Rolfe Robert Thatcher Rolfe F W 1974 The Romance of the Fungus World Courier Dover p 164 ISBN 978 0 486 23105 1 Harding 2008 p 157 Spindler Konrad 1995 Der Mann im Eis The man in ice Springer p 75 ISBN 978 3 211 82626 3 Cited texts editHarding Patrick 2008 Mushroom Miscellany HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 728464 1 Schmidt Olaf 2006 Wood and Tree Fungi Biology Damage Protection and Use Springer ISBN 978 3 540 32138 5 Schwarze Francis W M R Engels Julia Mattheck Claus 2000 Fungal Strategies of Wood Decay in Trees Springer ISBN 978 3 540 67205 0 Stamets Paul 2005 Mycelium Running Ten Speed Press ISBN 978 1 58008 579 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fomes fomentarius Fomes fomentarius in Index Fungorum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fomes fomentarius amp oldid 1194667620, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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