Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Orange Peels in the Forest?

On my recent excursion up to the high country, I went hiking to Harden Lake and found a familiar fungus, Orange Peel fungus.  I first identified these little gems in Northern Minnesota and was happy to see a familiar sight here in California.  I wrote up the following note which was posted on the NPS Ranger Note website for Yosemite National Park.  Find below the written post or click the following link to take you to the official Yosemite blog website:

Yosemite Ranger Notes



Hiking along a trail in the White Wolf area, to my surprise I saw an orange peel on the forest floor! Did someone litter? No, it wasn't the discarded shell from a delicious fruit we know well, but a cup-shaped fungus growing upward from the ground.
Orange peel fungus (Aleuria aurantia) usually grows in clusters on the ground, often in wooded areas near rotting trees and dead matter. They can be easy to miss, generally ranging in size from 1 to 2.5 inches (3-6 cm), but can reach up to 4 inches (10 cm) in diameter. They are found throughout North America, and are common during summer and fall. This fungus is a decomposer of dead organic material, returning nutrients such as hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen back into the soil to be used by other plants.
The forest floor is "littered" with a variety of mushrooms/fungus, colorful gems dotting the ground, helping to recycle nutrients. So while out hiking, be sure to Leave No Trace, and pack out all of what you packed in, and let it be that the only orange peels in the forest will be of the fungus variety.

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