Fungi Friday:a blessing from the rain, I saw some species of mushrooms smiling again
Hello mushroom hunting friends
In the past few days, the rainfall has started after several months of dry soil, which now looks softer. Of course, the blessing of rainwater can provide many benefits, such as to trees, plants, and even some species of mushrooms that have longed for rain; they can finally smile again, and it's time for them to reproduce. The wooden twigs that were initially dry now appear moist again. Today, I didn't see many of them appearing, but I have to be patient in the coming days. Mushroom species really start to appear after the soil and shrubs become moist.

Back to creating again to search for some mushroom species in the forest, my slow journey this time is to monitor how damp the shrubs I have previously explored are. It seems I haven't seen the shrubs looking very moist; only a few spots are starting to look damp, while the others still appear normal. I understand this, as it has only rained a few days ago; maybe the water is not enough yet, the soil needs a lot of water because it has been quite dusty for the past few months. In the middle of my mushroom-hunting journey, I noticed on one of the slightly damp wooden branches the appearance of a species of tooth fungus or Schizophyllum commune. This mushroom is fan-shaped and has very beautiful gills.







In a different corner, I came across another species of mushroom. This mushroom belongs to the bracket fungus family, or Daedaleopsis confragosa. This species is smaller than usual, probably because the recent rains have caused them to start appearing on already damp wood. If the rain continues over the next few days, they will begin to release their spores to propagate. What I like about this bracket fungus species is, of course, that in the back of its tough flesh, there is something very special hidden. The tiny pores that surround the back of its flesh make it something very special to me. I really like it.






At the end of today's story, I want to close my writing with one of the tiny mushroom species that appears at the tip of a branch of wood. I found this mushroom species some time ago, just before the rain started to fall. Its flesh began to shrivel and become crispy, and some parts of this mushroom were already wrinkled because they couldn't withstand the hot weather, causing some edges of its tiny cap to become fragile. The honeycomb polypore mushroom, or Neofavolus alveolaris, is one of the very beautiful tiny mushrooms seen during the rainy season. Hopefully, in the next few days, I will encounter this mushroom species again.





this is my contribution today for the #fungifriday Community created and organized by @ewkaw
Thank you very much to all my friends who have taken a little time to read my post, hopefully it can be useful for all of us.
greetings from me @furkanmamplam
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