Hul'q'umi'num' name:
tuw’tuw’uluqup
English Name:
Bracket Fungus
Alternative English Names:
Conk, Shelf Fungus, Tree Fungus, Echo
Scientific Name:
Various species of Fomes, Fomitopsis, Ganoderma, etc. of the Polypore Family (Polyporaceae)
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Description
Description, Habitat, Ecology, Distribution
The bracket fungi (or shelf fungi) comprise numerous species of the Polypore Family (Polyporaceae). Technically, these are not plants, gaining their sustenance through the decomposition of dead and dying plant matter. In our area there are numerous types of bracket fungi–also widely known as conks–including species of the fungal genera listed above as well as many others. The visible portion of a bracket fungus consists of the fruiting, or reproductive, body. Such structures may be an extremely long-lived and woody, adding a new layer of living fungal matter at the base of the structure each year. The vegetative portion of the fungus resides within the body of the tree (or dead stump), where it consists of an extensive network of filamentous fungal threads. Bracket fungi are widely distributed throughout the province where they occur upon a variety of host species.
Island Cultural Role
Some types of tree fungi (also known as shelf or bracket fungi) have been used for medicine or kept for good luck.
Language
Hul'q'umi'num' Name
tuw’tuw’uluqup
APA
təw̓təw̓ələqəp
Speaker
Bill Seward