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  2. Blue stain fungi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_stain_fungi

    Blue stain fungi (also known as sap stain fungi) is a vague term including various fungi that cause dark staining in sapwood. [1] The staining is most often blue, but could also be grey or black. Because the grouping is based solely on symptomatics, it is not a monophyletic grouping.

  3. Grosmannia clavigera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grosmannia_clavigera

    Grosmannia clavigera is a species of sac fungus that causes blue stain in wood. It spreads to lodgepole pine, ponderosa pine, Douglas-fir, and whitebark pine trees from the body and a special structure in the heads of mountain pine beetles.

  4. Spalting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spalting

    Spalting is divided into three main types: pigmentation, white rot, and zone lines.Spalted wood may exhibit one or all of these types in varying degrees. Both hardwoods and softwoods can spalt, but zone lines and white rot are more commonly found on hardwoods due to enzymatic differences in white rotting fungi.

  5. Tree hollow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_hollow

    A tree hollow or tree hole is a semi-enclosed cavity which has naturally formed in the trunk or branch of a tree. They are found mainly in old trees, whether living or not. They are found mainly in old trees, whether living or not.

  6. Physcia caesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physcia_caesia

    Physcia caesia, known colloquially as blue-gray rosette lichen and powder-back lichen, is a species of foliose lichenized fungus. First described by Georg Franz Hoffmann in 1784, it is common across much of Europe , North America and New Zealand , and more patchily distributed in South America , Asia , Australia and Antarctica .

  7. Which Trees Produce Spiky Round Balls? Here's How to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/kind-tree-produces-spiked-round...

    Ohio buckeye (Aesculus glabra) is usually a small to medium-size tree (20-40 feet tall) with compound leaves that have five oval-shaped leaflets. Closely related is the common horsechestnut ( A ...

  8. If You See Paint on Trees, This Is What It Means - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/see-paint-trees-means...

    Orange or yellow paints are used for harvest boundaries, and trees within those areas have blue, orange, green, or yellow paint, depending on whether they are to be taken or spared. A black paint ...

  9. Wood-decay fungus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood-decay_fungus

    Wood decay caused by Serpula lacrymans (called true dry rot, a type of brown-rot). Fomes fomentarius is a stem decay plant pathogen Dry rot and water damage. A wood-decay or xylophagous fungus is any species of fungus that digests moist wood, causing it to rot.