Trametes versicolor
Also known as Coriolus versicolor, Polyporus versicolor
TURKEY TAIL
Order: Polyporales, Family Polyporaceae
FRUITING BODY OVERLAPPING LEATHERY STALKLESS CAPS WITH MULTICOLORED ZONES
Cap: 2-10 cm wide, growing in rosettes; circular, semicircular, fan or kidney-shaped, often fused; flat or wavy; silky, hairy or velvety with smooth zones; colors extremely variable: mixture of white, gray, brown, reddish; flesh 1.2 mm thick, tough and leathery.
UNDERSIDE WITH SMALL WHITE TO YELLOW PORES
Tubes up to 3 mm long, 3-5 per mm, white to yellowish
SPORE PRINT WHITE
Spores: 5-6 x 1.5-2 , cylindric, smooth, colorless
NOT EDIBLE – TOO TOUGH TO TRY
FOUND ON WOOD OF DEAD HARDWOODS, especially oak
Sometimes on live tree wounds or rarely on conifers
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE TO KNOW...
This mushroom does look vaguely like a turkey tail. It is the most common polypore, and since it doesn’t decay rapidly, is used to make ornaments – necklaces, earrings, clips. There is a bewildering range of colors, which is its distinctive characteristic. As for edibility, David Arora suggests to “boil for 62 hours, squeeze thoroughly, and serve forth.”