Shelf-like to hoof-like & usually on wood


The fruitbodies of the fungi in this group grow from wood, but sometimes that wood may be buried. They range from fairly thin, shelf-like or bracket-like growths (with horizontal extent much greater than vertical thickness) to those that are very chunky (with vertical thickness equal to, or even greater than, horizontal extent).

 

In some species with shelf-like fruitbodies the shelves are wavy, rather than absolutely flat.

 

As well as the wholly shelf-like fruitbodies there are those that are flat sheet+shelf. These start as a flat growth on a downward facing surface (e.g. the lower side of a leaning trunk or of a fallen branch lying on the ground). After a while the upper edge of this sheet-like growth turns out from the wood to form a horizontal shelf. Technically such a composite growth form is described as effused-reflexed (effused: the sheet-like bit; reflexed: the shelf). In some species the shelf constitutes a significant proportion of the fruitbody and such species are included here.

 

There are other species that either remain flat on wood or where the margins of the mature fruitbody occasionally turn away from the wood, but very little and only to form a slight horizontal lip, with almost all of the mature fruitbody still the flat area. Look for those in Other fungi on wood.

 

Sometimes, understandably, you will be unsure whether you have a ‘shelf ‘or a ‘lip’. After all, a lip may be only an immature stage in the formation of a shelf. In a simple guide such as this, it is impossible to give a definitive answer for each case. The only possible advice is to look in each category and see if other features suggests a species or genus for your sighting.

 

Warnings

Some species which normally produce shelf-like to hoof-like fruitbodies can show considerable plasticity in fruitbody form, depending on where the fruitbody develops. For example, Pycnoporus coccineus (see the pored/maze-like sub-group) almost always produces shelf-like fruitbodies but you may find no more than a thick crust (seen on the underside of a ceiling) or an inverted, shallow cone (seen on the top side of a fallen branch). In such cases you would, quite understandably, look for a match to your sighting in some other category.

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Discussion

RoyP wrote:
15 Jan 2026
Royp
Thanks Heinol for your explanation - I was surprised to see such a big specimen and thrilled you took the time to inform me of the specie’s complexity.

Unverified Pored or somewhat maze-like on underside [bracket polypores]
Heinol wrote:
15 Jan 2026
Once upon a time this might have been a species of Coriolopsis. It had long been accepted that Coriolopsis had strong similarities with the genus Trametes, the major difference being that the former had brown hyphae (giving the fruitbodies an overall brownish tint) whereas the hyphae of Trametes were mostly colourless under a microscope (and so pale fruitbodies). I say mostly, because you could get coloured hairs on the upper surfaces of some Trametes (e.g. Trametes versicolor). However, slice a fruitbody in half vertically and you’d one was brown inside, the other white. Different colours implied different pigments which implied different internal chemistry and this was thought a good reason for having two genera. Then molecular analysis came along and showed that pigment differences weren’t that significant, so the two genera were considered identical - and Trametes had priority. Trametes than had many species, some people wondered if they all really belonged together and further analyses made some people think that the genus should be split up. One of those splits involved some of the species that had once been in Coriolopsis moving into the genus Funalia. At the start of all this I said ‘might’ because, given the colours, it also possible that this fungus could be a Phellinus or one of its relatives (again a case of a large genus being split). One of those cases where photos alone don’t give me enough information to be sure of genus.

Unverified Pored or somewhat maze-like on underside [bracket polypores]
Hejor1 wrote:
19 Dec 2025
@Heinol this was the most intact one, I was tempted to suggest trametes but not confident enough to do so.

zz Polypore (shelf/hoof-like)
Heinol wrote:
19 Dec 2025
Possibly a weathered Trametes.

zz Polypore (shelf/hoof-like)
Heinol wrote:
31 Oct 2025
Possibly a Coltriciella.

zz Polypore (shelf/hoof-like)
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